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Book ChapterDOI

Paleopedology as a Tool for Reconstructing Paleoenvironments and Paleoecology

TLDR
This chapter emphasizes a robust multi-proxy approach to paleopedology that combines soil stratigraphy, morphology, mineralogy, biology, and chemistry to provide an in-depth understanding of paleoecology.
Abstract
Soils form as a product of physical, chemical, and biological activity at the outermost veneer of Earth’s surface. Once buried and incorporated into the sedimentary record, these soils, now paleosols, preserve archives of ancient climates, ecosystems, and sedimentary systems. Paleopedology, the study of paleosols, includes qualitative interpretation of physical characteristics and quantitative analysis of geochemical and mineralogical assays. In this chapter, the paleosol macroscopic, micromorphological, mineralogical, and geochemical indicators of paleoecology are discussed with emphasis on basic analytical and interpretative techniques. These data can reveal a breadth of site-specific interpretations of vegetation, sedimentary processes, climatic variables, and durations of landscape stability. The well-known soil-forming factors are presented as a theoretical framework for understanding landscape-scale soil evolution through time. Vertical and lateral patterns of stacked paleosols that appear in the rock record are discussed in order to address practical approaches to identifying and describing paleosols in the field. This chapter emphasizes a robust multi-proxy approach to paleopedology that combines soil stratigraphy, morphology, mineralogy, biology, and chemistry to provide an in-depth understanding of paleoecology.

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Citations
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Journal ArticleDOI

Plant carbon assimilation rates in atmospheric CO2 reconstructions.

TL;DR: CO2 reconstructions that apply C assimilation rates from modern species based solely on phylogenetic relatedness to fossil species can result in CO2 estimates that are systematically biased by a factor of > 2.
Journal ArticleDOI

Constraints on Fe-Oxide Formation in Monsoonal Vertisols of Pliocene Kenya Using Rock Magnetism and Spectroscopy

TL;DR: In this article, the authors examined Pliocene Vertisols from the Turkana Basin of northwest Kenya (4°N latitude) using isothermal remanent magnetization (IRM) experiments, susceptibility measurements, and diffuse reflectance spectroscopy.
Book ChapterDOI

Making Sense of the Evidence: Synthesizing Paleoecological Data

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors discuss some of the ways that taphonomy can bias primary data and how awareness of such issues can increase the accuracy of paleoecological studies, and conclude that reconstructing ancient ecosystems requires accurate data and knowledge of potential biases; a thorough understanding of the analytical techniques being applied and their a priori assumptions; and a willingness to recognize non-analog species, habitats, and communities when necessary.
References
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Book

The Nature and Properties of Soils

Nyle C. Brady, +1 more
TL;DR: The Soils Around Us 2 Formation of Soils from Parent Materials 3 Soil Classification 4 Soil Architecture and Physical Properties 5 Soil Water: Characteristics and Behavior 6 Soil and the Hydrologic Cycle 7 Soil Aeration and Temperature 8 Soil Colloids: Seat of Soil Chemical and Physical Activity 9 Soil Acidity 10 Soils of Dry Regions: Alkalinity, Salinity, and Sodicity 11 Organisms and Ecology of the Soil 12 Soil Organic Matter 13 Nitrogen and Sulfur Economy of Soiles 14 Soil Ph
Book

Keys to Soil Taxonomy

Anonim Anonim
TL;DR: In this paper, the Soils That We Classify (Soil Orders, Suborders, Great Groups, and Subgroups) is presented. And the taxonomic class of a Soil is identified.
Journal ArticleDOI

Early Proterozoic climates and plate motions inferred from major element chemistry of lutites

TL;DR: The early Proterozoic Huronian Supergroup of the north shore of Lake Huron (Fig. 1) is a thick succession of sedimentary and volcanic rocks deposited between about 2,500 and 2,100 Myr ago as discussed by the authors.
Book

X-Ray Diffraction and the Identification and Analysis of Clay Minerals

TL;DR: The nature and production of x-rays diffraction effects structures, composition, properties and occurences of clay minerals sample preparation techniques for clay minerals identification of individual clay minerals and associated mineral identification of mixed layered clay minerals quantitative analysis as mentioned in this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Unraveling the effects of potassium metasomatism in sedimentary rocks and paleosols, with implications for paleoweathering conditions and provenance

TL;DR: In this article, the authors used ternary diagrams to determine the amount of K addition, premetasomatized sediment composition, and composition of provenance areas, which can be compared with the mineralogy of recent soil profiles and thus, climate and topographic conditions determined for past weathering events.
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