Abstract

The mineralogy and micromorphology of associated red Arenosols and both yellow and grey Gleysols of the Paleo-Chadian linear-dune landscape of the Far North Region of Cameroon were studied in order to obtain information about depositional environments and pedogenic processes. Differences between the red soils and both others include a significant difference in clay content, which is much higher in the grey and yellow soils. The composition of the clay fraction is also different, with kaolinite and illite as main mineral phases in the red soils, whereas smectite is strongly predominant in the grey soils and a major phase in the yellow soils. Mössbauer spectroscopy analysis reveals a predominance of hematite as iron oxide mineral in the red soils, in contrast to goethite-predominance in the yellow soils. Thin section observations reveal poor sorting of the coarse fraction, differences in feldspar content, and an absence of reworked clay aggregates, as well as the presence of pore-related carbonate features in the grey soils and iron oxide nodules in the grey and yellow soils. The obtained results indicate that the red soils are derived from a different parent material than the other soils. The grey soils developed on flood-related fluvial deposits in interdune depressions, whereas the red soils formed on aeolian sands and the yellow soils show a mixed origin. In the interdune depressions, hydromorphic conditions led to iron reduction and pedogenic carbonate enrichment.

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