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Published in Soil Sci Soc Am J 47:149-157 (1983)
© 1983 Soil Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Mineralogy of Saudi Arabian Soils: Central Alluvial Basins1

B. E. Viani2, A. S. Al-Mashhady3 and J. B. Dixon2

ABSTRACT

These investigations were conducted to provide basic soil chemical, physical, and mineralogical data for an area of Saudi Arabia that had not been studied and for which greatly increased agricultural development is anticipated. Fourteen soils were collected from two arid interior basin areas of Saudi Arabia. The silt and clay mineralogy was studied using x-ray diffraction, differential thermal analysis, and electron microscopy. Quantitative estimation of clay-sized minerals was based on a combination of chemical and x-ray diffraction techniques. The calcareous soils of the central basins show minimal profile development. Particle-size classes range from sandy-skeletal to fine silty. Soils with shallow water tables are saline with large SAR values. The clay minerals in soils of the basins are primarily inherited. Soils developed in alluvium from mixed igneous rocks have clay fractions in which smectite > mica > kaolinite > chlorite, palygorskite, vermiculite. Soils formed from Permian sedimentary rocks have kaolinitic clay fractions. It is postulated that the central basins do not receive sufficient Si inputs for palygorskite neoformation and it is though that palygorskite is detrital, originating from easternregion Tertiary rocks. The soil clays of the central hasins have greater smectite contents than those of the kaolinitic western highland soils and palygorskite-rich eastern-region soils.


NOTES

1 Contribution from the Texas Agric. Exp. Stn., College Station, TX 77843, and Research and Development, Ministry of Agric. and Water, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

2 Former Research Associate and Professor of Soil Mineralogy, Dep. of Soil & Crop Sci., Texas A&M Univ., College Station, TX 77843. Present address of B.E. Viani: Agronomy Dep., Purdue Univ., West Lafayette, IN 47907.

3 Head, Soil Science Dep., College of Agric., Univ. of King Saud, P.O. Box 1460, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

Received for publication July 30, 1981. Accepted for publication September 21, 1982.







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Copyright © 1983 by the Soil Science Society of America.