Characterization Of Arctic Soils: Interrelationships With Site And Vegetation

This study was undertaken with the intention of quantitatively characterizing arctic soils in terms of variations within profiles, and between profiles along a micro-environmental gradient. A suite of soils forming a catena in north central Keewatin (65(DEGREES)27' N, 96(DEGREES)38' W) was...

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Main Author: Banting, Douglas Ralph
Format: Text
Language:unknown
Published: Scholarship@Western 1982
Subjects:
Online Access:https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/digitizedtheses/1201
https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/context/digitizedtheses/article/2200/viewcontent/NK54089.PDF
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spelling ftunivwestonta:oai:ir.lib.uwo.ca:digitizedtheses-2200 2023-10-01T03:53:55+02:00 Characterization Of Arctic Soils: Interrelationships With Site And Vegetation Banting, Douglas Ralph 1982-01-01T08:00:00Z application/pdf https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/digitizedtheses/1201 https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/context/digitizedtheses/article/2200/viewcontent/NK54089.PDF unknown Scholarship@Western https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/digitizedtheses/1201 https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/context/digitizedtheses/article/2200/viewcontent/NK54089.PDF Digitized Theses Physical Geography text 1982 ftunivwestonta 2023-09-03T07:19:16Z This study was undertaken with the intention of quantitatively characterizing arctic soils in terms of variations within profiles, and between profiles along a micro-environmental gradient. A suite of soils forming a catena in north central Keewatin (65(DEGREES)27' N, 96(DEGREES)38' W) was investigated. Forty-five variables representing particle size properties, bulk density, moisture content, pH and exchangeable cations, the iron, aluminum and manganese extracted by dithionite, oxalate and pyrophosphate solutions, and various organic fractions were determined for each of 149 soil samples.;Characterization of the variations in these data was conducted using student's t-tests, analyses of variance and multivariate discriminant functions to differentiate among groups of samples which correspond to horizons and to slope segments suggested by the inherent regularity of site conditions and vegetation composition.;Differences between horizons were found to be characterized by organics (notably the sum of soluble and insoluble fractions determined using Kononova's (1966) technique), with pH, "free" iron (Fed), bulk density, and certain particle size fractions further distinguishing A, B and C horizons. "Norms" depicting the depth-distributions of variables displayed no general evidence indicative of illuvial accumulation in B horizons, however several properties suggest that eluviation has been operating. Surficial accumulation of organics (and perhaps aeolian detritus) appears to represent the dominant pedogenic mechanism, although relatively weakly expressed. A, B and C horizons are generally gradational.;Differences between profiles were also assessed using group-differentiating statistical techniques since both vegetation composition (especially lichens) and site variables were found to represent discrete segments along the transect. Differences in soils between these segments were characterized by particle size variations (notably silt enrichment in A horizons of "snowpatch" sites), "free" manganese ... Text Arctic Keewatin The University of Western Ontario: Scholarship@Western Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Western Ontario: Scholarship@Western
op_collection_id ftunivwestonta
language unknown
topic Physical Geography
spellingShingle Physical Geography
Banting, Douglas Ralph
Characterization Of Arctic Soils: Interrelationships With Site And Vegetation
topic_facet Physical Geography
description This study was undertaken with the intention of quantitatively characterizing arctic soils in terms of variations within profiles, and between profiles along a micro-environmental gradient. A suite of soils forming a catena in north central Keewatin (65(DEGREES)27' N, 96(DEGREES)38' W) was investigated. Forty-five variables representing particle size properties, bulk density, moisture content, pH and exchangeable cations, the iron, aluminum and manganese extracted by dithionite, oxalate and pyrophosphate solutions, and various organic fractions were determined for each of 149 soil samples.;Characterization of the variations in these data was conducted using student's t-tests, analyses of variance and multivariate discriminant functions to differentiate among groups of samples which correspond to horizons and to slope segments suggested by the inherent regularity of site conditions and vegetation composition.;Differences between horizons were found to be characterized by organics (notably the sum of soluble and insoluble fractions determined using Kononova's (1966) technique), with pH, "free" iron (Fed), bulk density, and certain particle size fractions further distinguishing A, B and C horizons. "Norms" depicting the depth-distributions of variables displayed no general evidence indicative of illuvial accumulation in B horizons, however several properties suggest that eluviation has been operating. Surficial accumulation of organics (and perhaps aeolian detritus) appears to represent the dominant pedogenic mechanism, although relatively weakly expressed. A, B and C horizons are generally gradational.;Differences between profiles were also assessed using group-differentiating statistical techniques since both vegetation composition (especially lichens) and site variables were found to represent discrete segments along the transect. Differences in soils between these segments were characterized by particle size variations (notably silt enrichment in A horizons of "snowpatch" sites), "free" manganese ...
format Text
author Banting, Douglas Ralph
author_facet Banting, Douglas Ralph
author_sort Banting, Douglas Ralph
title Characterization Of Arctic Soils: Interrelationships With Site And Vegetation
title_short Characterization Of Arctic Soils: Interrelationships With Site And Vegetation
title_full Characterization Of Arctic Soils: Interrelationships With Site And Vegetation
title_fullStr Characterization Of Arctic Soils: Interrelationships With Site And Vegetation
title_full_unstemmed Characterization Of Arctic Soils: Interrelationships With Site And Vegetation
title_sort characterization of arctic soils: interrelationships with site and vegetation
publisher Scholarship@Western
publishDate 1982
url https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/digitizedtheses/1201
https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/context/digitizedtheses/article/2200/viewcontent/NK54089.PDF
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Keewatin
genre_facet Arctic
Keewatin
op_source Digitized Theses
op_relation https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/digitizedtheses/1201
https://ir.lib.uwo.ca/context/digitizedtheses/article/2200/viewcontent/NK54089.PDF
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