Origin and nature of halloysite in Ando soils from Towada tephra,Japan |
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Authors: | Masahiko Saigusa auSadao Shoji Tatsuto Kato |
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Affiliation: | Faculty of Agriculture, Tohoku University, Sendai Japan |
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Abstract: | The origin and nature of halloysite in Ando soils from Towada tephra were investigated. These soils were formed from five tephras: Towada-a (1,000 years old), Towada-b (2,000 years old), Chuseri (4,000 years old), Nanbu (8,600 years old) and Ninokura (10,000 years old).Formation of halloysite took place only in the buried soils from Nanbu and Ninokura tephras occurring in an “accumulating zone”, where thicknesses of overburden tephra deposits were mostly 2.5 m or greater and silica enrichment of the clay fractions could occur.The amounts of halloysite were greater in (1) the soils from Ninokura tephra than in those from Nanbu tephra, and greater in (2) the humus horizons as compared to the nonhumus horizons of these same soils. The mean sizes of spheroidal halloysite particles and the ratios of numbers of tubular to spheroidal forms differed with differences in soil horizons and age.High-resolution electron micrographs of glycerol-solvated spheroidal halloysite particles had lattice images of 11 Å due to (001) from the exterior to the interior and had no indications of layer separation. Moreover, the central core of spheroidal halloysite with a diameter of 150 Å showed neither layer structure nor allophane spherules.Results obtained in this study thus indicate that spheroidal and tubular forms of halloysite were formed concurrently in these Ando soils. |
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