Abstract
Abstract Soils in coarse-grained tills on Pinedale (about 20,000 years old) and Bull Lake (about 140,000 years old) moraines show significant variaton with slope position and age. Soils on the Pinedale moraine are mostly non-calcareous Typic Cryoborolls with A/Bw/C profiles that thicken considerably downslope. These soils are weakly developed due to their youth and to the unstable, steep (up to 24°), highly convexo-concave slopes. Soils on the Bull Lake moraine are mostly Argic Cryoborolls with A/Bt/C profiles. These soils are more strongly developed than soils at similar positions on the Pinedale moraine because the Bull Lake moraine is older and has less steep (up to 16°), more gently curved slopes. The soils on the Bull Lake moraine contain more clay, a higher proportion of pedogenic clay, more weathered stones, and more free sesquioxides. Erosion and dry conditions at the convex summit and shoulder sites on the Bull Lake moraine have resulted in thin soils with minimal argillic horizons; these soils are only slightly more strongly developed than soils at analogous sites on the much younger Pinedale moraine. In contrast, at the concave sites in downslope positions the soils on the Bull Lake moraine are much more strongly developed than analogous soils on the Pinedale moraine; slow deposition of weathered material, probably transported by creep, has acted concurrently with pedogenesis to form soils with thick, homogeneous argillic horizons. The relationship between hillslope curvature and soil properties on both moraines is shown by significant correlations between soil properties and the second derivative of the hillslope profile. This relationship is probably due primarily to the interaction of soil formation and soil creep.
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