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Published in Soil Sci Soc Am J 61:1710-1722 (1997)
© 1997 Soil Science Society of America
677 S. Segoe Rd., Madison, WI 53711 USA
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Isotopic Study of Environmental Change from Disseminated Carbonate in Polygenetic Soils

Sean L. Connin* and C. Page Chamberlain

Dep. of Earth Sciences

Ross A. Virginia

Environmental Studies Program, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH 03755

* Corresponding author ( lachlan{at}sun1paztcn.wr.usgs.gov).

ABSTRACT

We evaluated the extent to which {delta}13C and {delta}18O values of disseminated carbonate preserve a signal of Holocene and modern vegetation changes in polygenetic soils of the Jornada Basin, New Mexico. Factors and processes influencing carbonate chemistry were constrained in a relict grassland community and recent mesquite [Prosopis glandulosa var. torreyana (L. Benson) M. Johnston] dunes, using 14C dates and {delta}13C data of soil organic matter (SOM) as independent measures of site history. Total-profile carbonate contents ranged from 39 to 451 kg m-2 due to local patterns of soil water infiltration and erosion. In grassland soils, 14C ages and {delta}13C values of disseminated carbonate in A and B horizons were influenced by the presence of older detrital carbonate, reworked from surrounding surfaces. As a result, carbonate isotopes did not record mid-Holocene climate and vegetation changes, which were inferred from {delta}13C values of coexisting SOM. Shrub expansion during the past century was recorded by changes in the {delta}13C values of disseminated carbonate and SOM from mesquite dunes. Carbon-14 data and mass balance estimates indicated that at least 80% of the dune carbonate (in C horizons) has been isotopically altered by dissolution and recrystallization processes in <100 yr. The modern carbonate is apparently forming from soil waters composed of nearly equal amounts of summer and winter rainfall, as evidenced by carbonate {delta}18O values. Our analyses indicate that disseminated carbonate can provide a meaningful environmental signal in polygenetic soils, when pedogenic contributions to isotopic variability are constrained.

Received for publication August 5, 1996.


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A. Serna-Perez, H. C. Monger, J. E. Herrick, and L. Murray
Carbon Dioxide Emissions from Exhumed Petrocalcic Horizons
Soil Sci. Soc. Am. J., March 29, 2006; 70(3): 795 - 805.
[Abstract] [Full Text] [PDF]




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Copyright © 1997 by the Soil Science Society of America.