Chemical Weathering Processes Leading to Soil Development in Arctic Glacial Forefields

Few Arctic forefields have been studied previously for their role in soil formation and in the carbon cycle. Yet, despite their prevailing polar climate, their soils may develop quickly and be extensive. Rock water residence times are prolonged in glacial tills that contain a rock flour component wi...

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Main Author: Blacker, Joshua John
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: University of Leeds 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/20696/
https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/20696/1/Joshua_John_Blacker_PhD_Thesis_2018_University_of_Leeds.pdf
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spelling ftwhiterose:oai:etheses.whiterose.ac.uk:20696 2023-05-15T14:22:54+02:00 Chemical Weathering Processes Leading to Soil Development in Arctic Glacial Forefields Blacker, Joshua John 2018-01 text https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/20696/ https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/20696/1/Joshua_John_Blacker_PhD_Thesis_2018_University_of_Leeds.pdf en eng University of Leeds https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/20696/1/Joshua_John_Blacker_PhD_Thesis_2018_University_of_Leeds.pdf Blacker, Joshua John (2018) Chemical Weathering Processes Leading to Soil Development in Arctic Glacial Forefields. PhD thesis, University of Leeds. cc_by_nc_sa CC-BY-NC-SA Thesis NonPeerReviewed 2018 ftwhiterose 2023-01-30T21:25:19Z Few Arctic forefields have been studied previously for their role in soil formation and in the carbon cycle. Yet, despite their prevailing polar climate, their soils may develop quickly and be extensive. Rock water residence times are prolonged in glacial tills that contain a rock flour component with high surface area and reactive that amasses in the forefields of glaciers as they retreat. Rapid sulfide oxidation and carbonate dissolution could be a potential CO2 source to the atmosphere, while silicate-weathering and soil organic carbon accumulation a CO2 sink. The extent of these sink-source reactions, and the soil forming processes that affect these, were tested over a century of Arctic forefield soil formation. In young, subglacial till-based moraine soils, the rapid depletion of accessory sulfide and carbonates minerals in the initial, and up to about 60-years of exposure, reflected widespread sulfide oxidation and carbonate dissolution. Defining young forefield soils as a potential transient CO2 source to the atmosphere, since potential CO2 sinks, namely calcium silicate mineral weathering and soil organic carbon accumulation were retarded, and limited to the older moraine soils. The slow onset of biological evolution in Arctic forefields and proton consumption by carbonates, present in the forefield lithologies, are suggested as the principal reasons for the limited silicate weathering and in turn soil formation. The results from this thesis may have new implications for the carbon cycle. Given glacial–interglacial cycles that have waxed and waned throughout Earth history, and carbonate and sulfide minerals are common in most lithologies made up of low to medium grade metamorphic and metasedimentary rocks. However, higher resolution temporal (diurnal to seasonal) and spatial field studies are needed in-order to more confidentially up-scale these findings beyond a glacier catchment scale. Thesis Arctic Arctic White Rose eTheses Online (Universities Leeds, Sheffield, York) Arctic
institution Open Polar
collection White Rose eTheses Online (Universities Leeds, Sheffield, York)
op_collection_id ftwhiterose
language English
description Few Arctic forefields have been studied previously for their role in soil formation and in the carbon cycle. Yet, despite their prevailing polar climate, their soils may develop quickly and be extensive. Rock water residence times are prolonged in glacial tills that contain a rock flour component with high surface area and reactive that amasses in the forefields of glaciers as they retreat. Rapid sulfide oxidation and carbonate dissolution could be a potential CO2 source to the atmosphere, while silicate-weathering and soil organic carbon accumulation a CO2 sink. The extent of these sink-source reactions, and the soil forming processes that affect these, were tested over a century of Arctic forefield soil formation. In young, subglacial till-based moraine soils, the rapid depletion of accessory sulfide and carbonates minerals in the initial, and up to about 60-years of exposure, reflected widespread sulfide oxidation and carbonate dissolution. Defining young forefield soils as a potential transient CO2 source to the atmosphere, since potential CO2 sinks, namely calcium silicate mineral weathering and soil organic carbon accumulation were retarded, and limited to the older moraine soils. The slow onset of biological evolution in Arctic forefields and proton consumption by carbonates, present in the forefield lithologies, are suggested as the principal reasons for the limited silicate weathering and in turn soil formation. The results from this thesis may have new implications for the carbon cycle. Given glacial–interglacial cycles that have waxed and waned throughout Earth history, and carbonate and sulfide minerals are common in most lithologies made up of low to medium grade metamorphic and metasedimentary rocks. However, higher resolution temporal (diurnal to seasonal) and spatial field studies are needed in-order to more confidentially up-scale these findings beyond a glacier catchment scale.
format Thesis
author Blacker, Joshua John
spellingShingle Blacker, Joshua John
Chemical Weathering Processes Leading to Soil Development in Arctic Glacial Forefields
author_facet Blacker, Joshua John
author_sort Blacker, Joshua John
title Chemical Weathering Processes Leading to Soil Development in Arctic Glacial Forefields
title_short Chemical Weathering Processes Leading to Soil Development in Arctic Glacial Forefields
title_full Chemical Weathering Processes Leading to Soil Development in Arctic Glacial Forefields
title_fullStr Chemical Weathering Processes Leading to Soil Development in Arctic Glacial Forefields
title_full_unstemmed Chemical Weathering Processes Leading to Soil Development in Arctic Glacial Forefields
title_sort chemical weathering processes leading to soil development in arctic glacial forefields
publisher University of Leeds
publishDate 2018
url https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/20696/
https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/20696/1/Joshua_John_Blacker_PhD_Thesis_2018_University_of_Leeds.pdf
geographic Arctic
geographic_facet Arctic
genre Arctic
Arctic
genre_facet Arctic
Arctic
op_relation https://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/20696/1/Joshua_John_Blacker_PhD_Thesis_2018_University_of_Leeds.pdf
Blacker, Joshua John (2018) Chemical Weathering Processes Leading to Soil Development in Arctic Glacial Forefields. PhD thesis, University of Leeds.
op_rights cc_by_nc_sa
op_rightsnorm CC-BY-NC-SA
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