Abstract

SUMMARYSix noncalcareous pedons from the basaltic terrain of the Western Ghats in Maharashtra, India, were identified for the present study. Of these, two red‐soil pedons (Typic Haplustalfs) and one black‐soil pedon (Vertic Ustropept) are from the Bhimashankar plateau at an elevation of 1000 m above mean sea level, experiencing a humid (>5000 mm rainfall) tropical climate. The other three pedons of black soils (Typic Chromusterts and Typic Ustropept) are from the semi‐arid zone (500–1000 mm rainfall), at an elevation of 825–893 m.Clay mineralogical investigation indicated that interstratified smectite‐kaolin (Sm/K) is dominant in red soils whereas smectite is dominant in black soils. The Sm/K is formed by the transformation of montmorillonite, the first weathering product of Deccan basalts in a humid tropical climate. We suggest that the interstratification of kaolin with chloritized smectite may also be an important ephemeral stage during the transformation of smectite to kaolinite. The presence of zeolites provided sufficient bases to prevent the complete transformation of Sm/K to kaolinite. The presence of smectites and zeolites made the formation of black soils possible in microdepressions even in a tropical humid climate. The genesis of Sm/K and smectite in red and black soils, respectively, suggests that these soils formed through a progressive landscape reduction process. The presence of both Sm/K and smectite in black soil clays of semi‐arid climate suggests that the smectite of these soils was formed in an earlier humid climate.

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