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Maryland Soils Developed in Residuum from Chloritic Metabasalt Having High Amounts of Vermiculite in Sand and Silt Fractions
Author(s) -
Coffman C. B.,
Fanning D. S.
Publication year - 1975
Publication title -
soil science society of america journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.836
H-Index - 168
eISSN - 1435-0661
pISSN - 0361-5995
DOI - 10.2136/sssaj1975.03615995003900040038x
Subject(s) - vermiculite , geology , chlorite , soil water , saprolite , parent rock , mineralogy , clay minerals , illite , weathering , cation exchange capacity , geochemistry , soil science , quartz , paleontology
From 60 to 90% of the calcium exchange capacity (pH 7 Ca acetate saturation, Mg acetate replacement) was attributable to > 2µm particles in subsoil horizons of an Ultic Hapludalf developed in residuum from chloritic metabasalt in Maryland's Middletown Valley. Vermiculite was the dominant reactive mineral in several soils examined from the area. For material above the rock from which organic matter and free iron oxides had been removed, the fraction of CaEC attributable to “vermiculite” (measured by CEC methods) interlayers increased with increasing particle size and (for whole soils) with increasing depth. The vermiculite appears to have formed from chlorite at the rock‐saprolite boundary, since vermiculite is absent in the rocks and chlorite is absent in the saprolite and micas are rare in both rocks and saprolites. Weathering also produces kaolinite and free iron oxides and eventually destroys vermiculite as shown by examination of soils of differing degrees of development. Most of the pedons examined in the present and in related studies were included in the Myersville and Fauquier soil series by concepts used for a soil survey of the study area published in 1960. Both soil series are placed in Ultic Hapludulfs in the current Soil Taxonomy , but many pedons mapped as Fauquier and Myersville in the 1960 survey appear to be Dystric Eutrochrepts and some on steep slopes are Udorthents. The soils examined do not meet requirements for vermiculitic family mineralogy in present Soil Taxonomy , even though cation exchange properties appeared governed by vermiculite. Substitute criteria are proposed to base vermiculitic family mineralogy on the “vermiculite” content of whole‐soils.

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