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Interesting article about the latest geophysical survey of the Cascadia fault

[-] Brudiclad@mander.xyz 2 points 7 months ago

Thanks for sharing this. Been interested on Amazonian dark earths since I did some of my soil science Ph.D. fieldwork down in the Cerrado. I wonder how transferable this is to other tropical/sub-tropical soil systems. I would expect both the type of inputs, climate, and soil type to affect how much SOC changes

[-] Brudiclad@mander.xyz 3 points 10 months ago* (last edited 10 months ago)

That’s a fine bed of moss on the surface. It’s boreal forest, so this area near a road cut had plenty of light. Other areas were dark enough from tree canopy cover that it was just some fallen needles that decompose into many organic acids - pH of the E horizon was around pH 3.5-4. That coupled with coarse texture and plenty of leaching with spring thaw helped develop the horizons. Despite the degree of development, this is a young soil relatively. This region was glaciated (continental ice sheet hundreds of meters thick) just 10,000 or so years ago.

[-] Brudiclad@mander.xyz 3 points 10 months ago

Yeah, this was from back in 2018 during the North American Forest Soil Conference, so it was taken with an old, crappy iPhone 5 camera. Still a good representation of the colors.

The other cool feature of this profile was the suspected krotovina(s). On the left, the light colored region looked like a burrow filled with light, E/Ae horizon material, while the patch on the right was filled with organic matter (it’s not just slough from the surface)

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submitted 10 months ago by Brudiclad@mander.xyz to c/soilscience@slrpnk.net

Brudiclad

joined 1 year ago