Abstract

Use of Jeffries acid-oxalate treatment in particle-size analyses of Ando soils for breaking up the sand- and silt-size aggregates bound by allophane, allophane-like constituents and hydrous iron oxides was studied. The analyses by this method and those by a method using sonic-wave oscillation were compared for nine Ando soil samples having different clay-mineral compositions and organic-matter contents. There were minor differences in the sand contents between the two analyses, but the clay contents were higher and the silt contents were lower after Jeffries acid oxalate treatment. Characterization of the silt-size separates by an X-ray powder method, water vapor adsorption and electron microscopy indicated that the lower silt contents after Jeffries acid oxalate treatment were mainly due to dissolution of allophane and allophane-like constituents, whereas the silt-size separates after sonic-wave treatment still contained these mineral constituents. The proposed procedure for particle-size analysis was also useful for two ferruginous soils representing the Hydrandept and Torrox.

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