Abstract

Distributive Fluvial Systems (DFS) are fan-shaped landforms constituted by a radial system of channels that diverge downstream from an active apex, where the drainage emerges from the confinement valley. In such landforms, elevation, distance from fluvial channels, sedimentation rates, surface stability, and plant cover control weathering processes and soil development, but these features are obliterated within geological time. Thus, the micromorphological analysis of paleosols can be helpful for paleoenvironmental reconstruction of ancient DFS, improving the knowledge of soil genesis in these depositional landforms. Here, we describe macro and micromorphological features of twenty paleosols developed under arid to semiarid climates along the proximal to the medial zone of an Upper Cretaceous DFS in the Marília Formation, Bauru Basin, Brazil. Paleosols on the proximal zone typically showed features consistent with poor drainage, namely Bg, Btg and Bss horizons, and reddish Bt horizons in higher positions. Conversely, paleosols on the medial zone commonly showed reddish colours and pronounced secondary carbonate accumulation, consistent with a predominantly arid climate. Based on this distribution, we elaborated an evolution landscape model for the proximal and medial zone of the Bauru DFS, including allogenic and authigenic controls of soil development during the Campanian to the Maastrichtian epochs of southeastern Brazil.

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