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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Relating the Expression of Soil Redoximorphic Features to Soil Texture, pH, and Cation Exchange Capacity

Mersmann, Ryan S. 14 January 2010 (has links)
Three laboratory studies were performed to elucidate the influence of soil texture, pH, and cation exchange capacity (CEC) on the concentration of ferrous Fe in soil solution and the resulting expression of soil redoximorphic features. The objectives were: 1) assess the buffering effects of CEC on ferrous Fe concentration in soil solution, 2) evaluate the effects of pH on the concentration of ferrous Fe in soil solution, and 3) observe the expression of redoximorphic features in soils with varying texture and CEC. The studies concentrated on seasonally wet soils from the Texas Gulf Coast Prairie. Selected soils included Alfisols and Vertisols with characteristics ranging from coarse-loamy to very-fine in texture, strongly acidic to neutral in soil reaction, and siliceous, mixed, and smectitic in mineralogy. The soils included the Pledger clay microlow (acidic, fine-textured), Pledger clay microhigh (neutral, fine-textured), China clay (acidic, fine-textured), Cieno loam (acidic, fine-loamy), Orelia sandy clay loam (neutral, fine-loamy), Gessner fine sandy loam (acidic, coarse-loamy), and Orelia fine sandy loam (neutral, coarse-loamy). The studies provided the following information: 1) fine-textured soils with higher CEC contained more ferrous Fe in solution, 2) ferrous Fe concentrations in the acidic fine-loamy and coarse-loamy soils were higher than the neutral soils for the same textural class, 3) acidic and neutral fine-textured soils contained more ferrous Fe in solution than the remaining soils, 4) the highest percentage of redox concentrations was observed in the acidic, fine-textured soil, 5) the acidic fine-loamy and coarse-loamy soils exhibited a greater percentage of Fe depletions, and 6) a higher percentage of redox features were observed by micromorphic analysis (i.e., point counts under a binocular stereoscopic microscope) than by macromorphic descriptions. This research showed that differing soil characteristics affect the reductive dissolution and translocation of Fe, and subsequent formation of redox features.

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