Abstract

AbstractWeathering processes have been studied in a podzol profile developed on sand during a postglacial period of 9400 years. Due to disintegration of rock fragments, the particle-size distribution has changed markedly in the upper part of the profile, and minerals have been transferred from sand fractions to silt and clay fractions. The most important weathering processes are the total breakdown of trioctahedral chlorite and biotite, and the transformation of dioctahedral mica (muscovite-phengite) to a regularly interstratified mineral, and further to Al-vermiculite or smectite. By using quartz as an internal standard, the annual loss due to weathering was found to be 3·2 g/m2. The release of elements due to silicate weathering was calculated from depletion curves, and the average annual release of Na + K + Mg + Ca for the postglacial period was 19 mEq/m2.

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