Abstract

In a field experiment in which heavy applications of liquid dairy manure were added annually for 6 yr to a vermiculite-containing corn-cropped sandy clay loam soil (Mountain series), fixation potential and X-ray diffraction analyses were done to determine if fixation of added K+ and NH4+ had occurred and clay mineralogical changes could be detected. Of the 850 kg K+ and the 460 kg NH4+ added per hectare each year, approximately 28% of the K+ and 24% of the NH4+ remained fixed. This caused a marked increase in the 1.0-nm peak at the expense of the 1.4-nm peak due to collapse of vermiculite layers to form pedogenic mica. Thus, changes in soil management, specifically in fertilizer practices, can result in significant changes in clay mineralogy within a short period of time. Such changes are agronomically important and should be taken into account in the interpretation of clay mineralogical data. Key words: Potassium and ammonium fixation, vermiculite to pedogenic mica transformation, liquid manure application

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