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Chen et al., 2019

Paper/Book

Redoximorphic Bt horizons of the Calhoun CZO soils exhibit depth-dependent iron-oxide crystallinity

Chen, Chunmei, Diego Barcellos, Daniel D. Richter, Paul A. Schroeder, Aaron Thompson (2019)
Journal of Soils and Sediments 19(2):785-797  

Abstract

Purpose Iron (Fe) oxyhydroxides and their degree of ordering or crystallinity strongly impact the role that Fe plays in ecosystem function. Lower crystallinity phases are generally found to be more reactive than higher crystallinity phases as sorbents for organic matter and chemical compounds, as electron acceptors for organic matter mineralization or as electron donors for dysoxic respiration. We investigated Fe solid phase speciation as a function of soil depth in a redoximorphic upland soil profile.

Materials and methods We examined a redoximorphic upland soil profile, which displayed alternating Fe-enriched and Fedepleted zones of the Bt horizons with platy structure from 56 to 183 cm depth at the Calhoun Critical Zone Observatory in South Carolina, USA. Redoximorphic Fe depletion and enrichment zones were sampled to enable a detailed investigation of Fe mineralogy during redox transformations. All samples were characterized by total elemental analysis, X-ray diffraction, and 57Fe Mössbauer spectroscopy.

Results and discussion Total Fe in the Fe-enriched and Fe-depleted zones was 26.3 – 61.2 and 15.0 – 22.7 mg kg-1 soil, respectively, suggesting periodic redox cycling drives Fe redistribution within the upland soil profile. The Mössbauer data clearly indicated goethite (56 – 74% of total Fe) and hematite (7 – 31% of total Fe) in the Fe-enriched zones, with the proportion of hematite increasing with depth at the expense of goethite. In addition, the overall crystallinity of Fe phases increased with depth in the Fe-enriched zones. In contrast to Fe-enriched zones, Fe-depleted zones contained no hematite and substantially less goethite (and of a lower crystallinity) but more aluminosilicates-Fe(III) (e.g., hydroxy-interlayered vermiculite, biotite, kaolinite) with XRD and Mössbauer data suggesting a shift from oxidized biotite-Fe(III) at depth to hydroxy-interlayered vermiculite plus lowcrystallinity goethite in the Fe-depleted zones in the upper Bt.

Conclusions Our data suggest the varied crystalline states of hematite and goethite may be important for Fe reduction over longterm time scales. The persistence of low-crystallinity Fe phases in Fe depletion zones suggests that both dissolution and reprecipitation events occur in the Fe-depleted layers. These variations in Fe phase abundance and crystallinity within similar redoximorphic features suggest that Fe likely shifts ecosystem roles as a function of soil depth and likely has more rapid Fe cycling in the upper Bt horizons in upland soils, while serving as a weathering engine at depth.

Citation

Chen, Chunmei, Diego Barcellos, Daniel D. Richter, Paul A. Schroeder, Aaron Thompson (2019): Redoximorphic Bt horizons of the Calhoun CZO soils exhibit depth-dependent iron-oxide crystallinity. Journal of Soils and Sediments 19(2):785-797. DOI: 10.1007/s11368-018-2068-2

This Paper/Book acknowledges NSF CZO grant support.