Structural features of humic acids from a soil toposequence in Western Siberia

Western Siberia occupies the middle part of Russia. This area extends more than 3000 km from the West to East and more than 1500 km from the North to the South and it is characterized by a diversity of natural conditions. In the Western Siberia the latitudinal and vertical zonality of soil and plant...

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Main Authors: klenov, B. M., González-Vila, Francisco Javier, Almendros Martín, Gonzalo
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: 2008
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10261/81454
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spelling ftcsic:oai:digital.csic.es:10261/81454 2024-02-11T10:09:04+01:00 Structural features of humic acids from a soil toposequence in Western Siberia klenov, B. M. González-Vila, Francisco Javier Almendros Martín, Gonzalo 2008 http://hdl.handle.net/10261/81454 en eng http://hdl.handle.net/10261/81454 open comunicación de congreso http://purl.org/coar/resource_type/c_5794 2008 ftcsic 2024-01-16T09:51:48Z Western Siberia occupies the middle part of Russia. This area extends more than 3000 km from the West to East and more than 1500 km from the North to the South and it is characterized by a diversity of natural conditions. In the Western Siberia the latitudinal and vertical zonality of soil and plant cover is more clearly pronounced. Soil-forming conditions, environmental situation and soil genesis have been studied rather completely where, to some degree, the changes of humus composition have been considered as a result of the prolonged soil use. The results of the above mentioned investigations have been described in some review monographs (Klenov, 1981, Dergacheva M.I., 1984). In this study analytical pyrolysis was performed using a 2020, Frontier Laboratories device and a GC/MS Agilent 6890 with an HP 5MS column. Oven temperature was held at 50 ºC for 1 min, then increased up to 100 ºC at 30 ºC min-1, from 100 to 300 ºC at 10 ºC min-1 and isothermal at 300 ºC for 10 min using a rate of 20 ºC min-1. The gas used was helium with a flow of 1 ml min-1. Latitudinal gradient (North to South) is reflected by a classical sequence of soils and pyrolysis compounds from humic acid. The most striking feature of Podzol (Albeluvisol) soil (a) was the high yield of levoglucosan, suggesting preservation of carbohydrate-derived structures in Taiga soils. In Umbric Podzol (b) there was a well-defined methoxyphenol (lignin-derived) pattern but additional unspecific aromatics (alkylphenols and alkylbenzenes), N-compounds (pyridinone and lesser amounts of alkylpyrrols) and carbohydrate-derived products (furans). Compared to the former sample, this pattern suggest aromaticity in a medium where selective preservation of protein and carbohydrate is an efficient factor for soil carbon sequestration. In Gray Luvic Phaeozem (c) the N-compunds may represent major peaks in the pyrogram, whereas in Luvic Chernozem (d) large aromaticity and condensation (methoxyl-lacking aromatic fragments) is recognized, whereas furans and benzofurans ... Conference Object taiga Siberia Digital.CSIC (Spanish National Research Council)
institution Open Polar
collection Digital.CSIC (Spanish National Research Council)
op_collection_id ftcsic
language English
description Western Siberia occupies the middle part of Russia. This area extends more than 3000 km from the West to East and more than 1500 km from the North to the South and it is characterized by a diversity of natural conditions. In the Western Siberia the latitudinal and vertical zonality of soil and plant cover is more clearly pronounced. Soil-forming conditions, environmental situation and soil genesis have been studied rather completely where, to some degree, the changes of humus composition have been considered as a result of the prolonged soil use. The results of the above mentioned investigations have been described in some review monographs (Klenov, 1981, Dergacheva M.I., 1984). In this study analytical pyrolysis was performed using a 2020, Frontier Laboratories device and a GC/MS Agilent 6890 with an HP 5MS column. Oven temperature was held at 50 ºC for 1 min, then increased up to 100 ºC at 30 ºC min-1, from 100 to 300 ºC at 10 ºC min-1 and isothermal at 300 ºC for 10 min using a rate of 20 ºC min-1. The gas used was helium with a flow of 1 ml min-1. Latitudinal gradient (North to South) is reflected by a classical sequence of soils and pyrolysis compounds from humic acid. The most striking feature of Podzol (Albeluvisol) soil (a) was the high yield of levoglucosan, suggesting preservation of carbohydrate-derived structures in Taiga soils. In Umbric Podzol (b) there was a well-defined methoxyphenol (lignin-derived) pattern but additional unspecific aromatics (alkylphenols and alkylbenzenes), N-compounds (pyridinone and lesser amounts of alkylpyrrols) and carbohydrate-derived products (furans). Compared to the former sample, this pattern suggest aromaticity in a medium where selective preservation of protein and carbohydrate is an efficient factor for soil carbon sequestration. In Gray Luvic Phaeozem (c) the N-compunds may represent major peaks in the pyrogram, whereas in Luvic Chernozem (d) large aromaticity and condensation (methoxyl-lacking aromatic fragments) is recognized, whereas furans and benzofurans ...
format Conference Object
author klenov, B. M.
González-Vila, Francisco Javier
Almendros Martín, Gonzalo
spellingShingle klenov, B. M.
González-Vila, Francisco Javier
Almendros Martín, Gonzalo
Structural features of humic acids from a soil toposequence in Western Siberia
author_facet klenov, B. M.
González-Vila, Francisco Javier
Almendros Martín, Gonzalo
author_sort klenov, B. M.
title Structural features of humic acids from a soil toposequence in Western Siberia
title_short Structural features of humic acids from a soil toposequence in Western Siberia
title_full Structural features of humic acids from a soil toposequence in Western Siberia
title_fullStr Structural features of humic acids from a soil toposequence in Western Siberia
title_full_unstemmed Structural features of humic acids from a soil toposequence in Western Siberia
title_sort structural features of humic acids from a soil toposequence in western siberia
publishDate 2008
url http://hdl.handle.net/10261/81454
genre taiga
Siberia
genre_facet taiga
Siberia
op_relation http://hdl.handle.net/10261/81454
op_rights open
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