Abstract

SummaryShallow friable red soils (euchrozems) and shallow cracking clays (black earths) occur in close proximity on basalt hills of the Darling Downs of Queensland. The euchrozems are mainly restricted to fiat hill crests and are associated with lithosols; the shallow black earths occur on upper pediment slopes, on small convex crests and on depressions on flat crests. The euchrozems are moderately leached and contain kaolin minerals and hematite with minor montmorillonite, while the black earths are dominantly montmorillonite with minor kaolin and hematite. It is proposed that the euchrozems have developed by long continued weathering under stable well‐drained conditions while the black earths have formed in sites prone to erosion and in situations with less water available for weathering. The weathering products produced in each situation have ensured continuation of the processes. The presence of two red soils in anomalous positions have been ascribed to (a) soil formation on exposed ‘bole’ (compacted red clay) layers and (b) local peculiarities of parent material controlling the course of weathering.

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