Land (Sep 2024)

The Clay Minerals in the Soils of the Gypseous Belt of Barbastro, NE Spain

  • Juan Herrero,
  • Raimundo Jiménez-Ballesta,
  • Carmen Castañeda

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3390/land13091415
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 13, no. 9
p. 1415

Abstract

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This article examines the clay mineralogy of twelve representative soils developed from gypsum-rich parent materials on several geomorphic positions. These soils were classified as Haploxerept, plus one profile as Humixerept and another as Xerorthent. The clay mineralogy, determined by X-ray diffraction, showed quite a similar clay composition in all profiles, with mica, chlorite, and smectite, from most to less abundant. Mica and chlorite are deemed inherited, while smectite—appearing in minor proportions—could result from both transformation and/or neoformation, because the leaching of bases by free drainage does not favor the transformation of mica to smectite. Therefore, the differences in clay mineralogy appeared to be lithogenic rather than pedogenic. These compositional data are an advance in the basic knowledge of the studied soils.

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