Title of article :
Rock Magnetic Investigations of Surface and sub-surface soil Samples from five Lake Catchments in Tropical Southern India
Author/Authors :
Sandeep، K نويسنده Department of Marine Geology , , Warrier، A.K نويسنده Department of Marine Geology , , Harshavardhana، B.G نويسنده Department of Marine Geology , , Shankar، R نويسنده Department of Marine Geology ,
Issue Information :
فصلنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2012
Abstract :
Iron oxide minerals in soils provide valuable insights into pedogenic processes. A wealth of such
information has been obtained by rock magnetic investigations on temperate soils but similar studies on
tropical soils are rare. Here, we report rock magnetic data on pristine soil profiles and surficial soils from five
catchments in the tropical southern India and throw light on the pedogenic processes. We ruled out contributions
from greigite, bacterial magnetite and anthropogenic sources; hence, the magnetic signal is mainly from the
catchment, principally pedogenic and, thus, has a climatic signature embedded in it. The Pookot profile from
a high rainfall (~4000 mm/year) region does not exhibit any magnetic enhancement at the surface. In fact, there
is hardly any difference between surface and sub-surface samples, which reflects on its deeply weathered
nature as a result of the high rainfall. The Shantisagara profile exhibits lessivage of magnetic minerals, resulting
in a thick magnetically enhanced zone. It shows the highest ?lf values among the five profiles studied. The
Thimmannanayakanakere (TK) and Ayyanakere (AK) soil profiles do not exhibit any magnetic enhancement
of top-soil. In fact, ?lf values increase towards the profile-bottom, suggesting top-soil erosion, besides
contribution of magnetic minerals from parent rocks. In the TK profile, there is a clear distinction between
surface and sub-surface samples, the former being magnetically coarser grained. The Kurburukere profile
exhibits moderate to strong ?lf values and a mild magnetic enhancement at the surface.The data would be useful
for establishing soil-sediment linkages for paleoclimatic studies of lake sediments.
Journal title :
International Journal of Environmental Research(IJER)
Journal title :
International Journal of Environmental Research(IJER)