Transformations and neoformations of clay in the cryogenic environment: examples from Transbaikalia (Siberia) and Patagonia (Argentina)

Summary Permafrost desiccates and indurates soil horizons. During summer, the perennially frozen ground under the active thawed layer creates confined conditions, Whereas in winter the closed system between the permafrost and the freezing front migrating downwards leads to irreversible changes in th...

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Bibliographic Details
Published in:European Journal of Soil Science
Main Authors: VOGT, T., LARQUÉ, P.
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: Wiley 1998
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1046/j.1365-2389.1998.4930367.x
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Summary:Summary Permafrost desiccates and indurates soil horizons. During summer, the perennially frozen ground under the active thawed layer creates confined conditions, Whereas in winter the closed system between the permafrost and the freezing front migrating downwards leads to irreversible changes in the soil structure and to transformation and neoformation of minerals. Two examples were studied by field observation and laboratory analyses (optical microscopy, scanning electron microscopy, X‐ray diffractometry, transmission electron microscopy and analytical electron microscopy). In Transbaikalia (southeastern Siberia) a Pleistocene cryogenic slope deposit on syenite contains detrital clays (chlorite, illite), but neoformed ferroan smectites dominate. In Patagonia, centimetre‐sized silica concretions containing spongy and spheroidal opal occur in alluvium ascribed to cold Pleistocene periods. They seem to have formed from primary detrital smectite that was transformed to fibrous clay (sepiolite) then to acicular opal, and eventually to spheroidal opal. The neoformed opal contains 27% magnesium. These features occur systematically within fossil cryoturbations not related to present conditions. It appears that clay transformation and neoformation can happen at temperatures far lower than 0°C.