Abstract

Abstract. Soil physical properties highly influence soil hydraulic properties, which define the soil hydraulic behavior. Thus, changes within these properties affect water flow paths and the soil water and matter balance. Most often these soil physical properties are assumed to be constant in time, and little is known about their natural evolution. Therefore, we studied the evolution of physical and hydraulic soil properties along two soil chronosequences in proglacial forefields in the Central Alps, Switzerland: one soil chronosequence developed on silicate and the other on calcareous parent material. Each soil chronosequence consisted of four moraines with the ages of 30, 160, 3000, and 10 000 years at the silicate forefield and 110, 160, 4900, and 13 500 years at the calcareous forefield. We investigated bulk density, porosity, loss on ignition, and hydraulic properties in the form of retention curves and hydraulic conductivity curves as well as the content of clay, silt, sand, and gravel. Samples were taken at three depths (10, 30, 50 cm) at six sampling sites at each moraine. Soil physical and hydraulic properties changed considerably over the chronosequence. Particle size distribution showed a pronounced reduction in sand content and an increase in silt and clay content over time at both sites. Bulk density decreased, and porosity increased during the first 10 millennia of soil development. The trend was equally present at both parent materials, but the reduction in sand and increase in silt content were more pronounced at the calcareous site. The organic matter content increased, which was especially pronounced in the topsoil at the silicate site. With the change in physical soil properties and organic matter content, the hydraulic soil properties changed from fast-draining coarse-textured soils to slow-draining soils with high water-holding capacity, which was also more pronounced in the topsoil at the silicate site. The data set presented in this paper is available at the online repository of the German Research Center for Geosciences (GFZ; Hartmann et al., 2020b). The data set can be accessed via the DOI https://doi.org/10.5880/GFZ.4.4.2020.004.

Highlights

  • Today’s landscapes are affected by changes, e.g., in the form of climate conditions or land use

  • It is already known that soils developed on calcareous material are richer in organic carbon and clay particles (Jenny, 1941), but little is known how strong these differences are throughout the course of soil development and how much they influence the soil hydraulic behavior

  • The evolution of soil physical and hydraulic properties over 10 millennia was investigated by analyzing soil samples of soil chronosequences in two glacier forefields: one glacier forefield developed on silicate and the other on calcareous parent material

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Summary

Introduction

Today’s landscapes are affected by changes, e.g., in the form of climate conditions or land use. A few studies have looked at how changing physical soil properties and organic matter content affect soil water transport (Lohse and Dietrich, 2005; Yoshida and Troch, 2016; Hartmann et al, 2020a) or have focused directly on the development of soil hydraulic properties in the form of retention curves and hydraulic conductivity curves (Crocker and Dickson, 1957; Deuchars et al, 1999; Lohse and Dietrich, 2005). Further soil physical and hydraulic properties from chronosequence studies can be helpful to derive information of water and nutrient availability, which can be important for other chronosequence studies related to abundance, diversity, and function of microbial life in initial soils as well as for studies of vegetation succession

Study sites
Silicate parent material
Calcareous parent material
Soil sampling
Laboratory analysis
Bulk density and porosity
Soil texture
Loss on ignition
Retention curves
Hydraulic conductivity curves
Data quality and uncertainties
Findings
Summary

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