Title
Clay mineralogy of the soils in the south Ecuadorian páramo region
Date Issued
01 July 2005
Access level
open access
Resource Type
journal article
Author(s)
Sevink J.
De Leeuw B.
Deckers J.
Universidad de Cuenca
Publisher(s)
Elsevier
Abstract
The páramo soils of the mountainous upper Andean region (>3300 m a. s. l.) of the Rio Paute basin in central Ecuador are characterized by a thick, dark, highly organic epipedon and are classified as Andosols and Histosols. Their high water retention and buffering capacity play a key role in the hydrology of the region, which is subject to land use changes and increased cultivation. In the west (Western Cordillera), the soils are largely formed in the late Miocene and Pliocene volcanoclastic Tarqui formation, while in the east (Central Cordillera) they are formed in an older, mostly intermediate low-grade metamorphic rocks. Ten soil profiles were sampled and studied, using extraction techniques (oxalate and pyrophosphate) and XRD-techniques. Major differences in composition of the clay fractions were found that allow for distinction of three main groups of páramo soils. A first group consists of soils influenced by recent volcanic ashes and dominated by organometallic complexes and with minor but distinct amounts of degraded mica, most probably formed by weathering of primary mica, present in these ashes. The second group comprises soils formed in volcanoclastic material of various Tertiary and earlier formations, containing residual primary and secondary crystalline clay-size minerals, as well as organometallic complexes whose genesis can be linked to the abundant presence of easily weatherable materials in these formations. A third group consists of soils in relicts of Tertiary, highly weathered regolith, formed under humid tropical conditions before the Andean uplift and occurring in the Central Cordillera. These soils contain kaolinite and gibbsite and develop into Histosols in the absence of significant organometallic complexation. © 2004 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Start page
114
End page
129
Volume
127
Issue
February 1
Language
English
OCDE Knowledge area
Geociencias, Multidisciplinar Oceanografía, Hidrología, Recursos hídricos Mineralogía
Scopus EID
2-s2.0-20444422963
Source
Geoderma
ISSN of the container
00167061
Sponsor(s)
We like to thank Dr. Felipe Cisneros, director of PROMAS (the Programme for Soil and Water Management of the Universidad de Cuenca, Ecuador), for logistic help during the study, and Hannele Duyck, Jaime Garrido and Pablo Borja for their intensive help during the field trips. We also thank the Fund for Scientific Research Flanders, which supported W. Buytaert as a researcher.
Sources of information: Directorio de Producción Científica Scopus