Abstract

Ferromagnetic compounds of seven southwestern soils from Pampean region comprise iron oxides and oxyhydroxides that have an important role, because of their high surface reactivity, controlling soil adsorption and formation/conservation of soil structure among other properties. We detected minutes of iron oxides quantities by selective dissolution techniques: acid oxalate extraction (<12% of the total Fe) and dithionite-citrate-bicarbonate (<44% of the total Fe), moreover, we identified/quantified mixtures of magnetite, maghemite, goethite and hematite minerals by environmental magnetism approach. The magnetic particle size dependent parameters evidence a relationship with extractable Fe oxides, indicating that magnetic particle size distribution on these soils is a relevant property associated to poorly crystalline and free amorphous Fe oxides. In addition, the particle size and SP concentration of ferromagnetic iron oxides are associated with increments of cation exchange capacity and the specific surface area of soil samples. The estimated amounts of hematite are below 2.20 wt%, and lower contents of about 0.25 wt% correspond to magnetite components. Both magnetic iron oxides concentration, as well as the remanent coercivity, increase towards the western region, on the contrary, anhysteretic ratios decrease and hence relatively coarser magnetic particles are dominant in this western region. The present study provides valuable data to characterize Aridisols, Entisols and Mollisols in a region of high fertility that comprises ones of the world’s most productive agricultural soil region.

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