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Published in Soil Sci. Soc. Am. J. 67:1496-1506 (2003).
© 2003 Soil Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA

DIVISION S-5—PEDOLOGY

Pedogenesis in Lutitic Cr Horizons of Gypsiferous Soils

O. Artieda and J. Herrero*

Dep. of Soils and Irrigation, Laboratorio asociado de Agronomía y Medio Ambiente (DGA-CSIC), P.O. Box 727, 50080 Zaragoza, Spain

* Corresponding author (jhi{at}aragob.es).

The weathering of lutites in aridic or near-aridic environments leading to soil horizons is not well known. Lutites are a common soil parent rock composed of silt and clay, that may be massive or may have their sedimentary origin marked by layers of alternating color or granulometry, or by fissility along planes. Lutites underlying soils are considered Cr horizons and show different alteration stages recognizable in the field by the degree of the layering disturbance or by the loss of coherence. In the study area, neither the dry climate nor the kind of clay minerals, mainly illite, can explain the weathering of lutites. This study was conducted to investigate the initial weathering reactions as encountered in Cr horizons, and to depict the processes responsible for pedogenesis from lutites in gypsiferous soils of the Ebro Valley (Spain). We described 12 soils in the field under two different soil moisture regimes, with further characterization through chemical analyses and micromorphology by thin section and scanning electron microscope (SEM). The microscopic study revealed two distinctive pedofeatures in the Cr horizons: (i) lenticular gypsum crystals; and (ii) "queras," sub-millimetric biotic features produced by calcification-decalcification processes. Growth of gypsum crystals in these horizons resulted in an "isles fabric," that is, isles of fine materials in a mass of gypsum crystals, with much greater porosity than the parent lutite. The growth of gypsum crystals and the development of queras result in a particle-size distribution change and an increased porosity of the Cr horizons.

Abbreviations: BSE, backscattered electron • CCE, calcium carbonate equivalent • EDS, energy dispersive spectrometer • GE, gypsum equivalent • MAP, mean annual precipitation • MAT, mean annual temperature • OC, organic C • RET, reference evapotranspiration • SEM, scanning electron microscope







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