DOI: 10.24124/2010/bpgub679
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Soil genesis in relation to glacial history, Central Yukon.

Abstract: The author has granted a non exclusive license allowing Library and Archives Canada to reproduce, publish, archive, preserve, conserve, communicate to the public by telecommunication or on the Internet, loan, distribute and sell theses worldwide, for commercial or non commercial purposes, in microform, paper, electronic and/or any other formats. L'auteur a accorde une licence non exclusive permettant a la Bibliothdque et Archives Canada de reproduire, publier, archiver, sauvegarder, conserver, transmettre au p… Show more

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Cited by 1 publication
(6 citation statements)
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“…These results are similar to those x Kaolinite-montmorillonite, as per criteria given by Foscolos et al (1977). obtained for other central Yukon pedons formed primarily on morainal and residual parent materials (Bond and Sanborn 2006;Dampier 2010). Allowing for differences in sample pretreatments, the absence of published diffraction patterns in some studies, and the semiquantitative nature of X-ray clay mineralogy, the clay mineral assemblages observed in these Wounded Moose argillic horizons appear consistent with those reported previously for a much smaller number of samples.…”
Section: Clay Mineralogysupporting
confidence: 88%
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“…These results are similar to those x Kaolinite-montmorillonite, as per criteria given by Foscolos et al (1977). obtained for other central Yukon pedons formed primarily on morainal and residual parent materials (Bond and Sanborn 2006;Dampier 2010). Allowing for differences in sample pretreatments, the absence of published diffraction patterns in some studies, and the semiquantitative nature of X-ray clay mineralogy, the clay mineral assemblages observed in these Wounded Moose argillic horizons appear consistent with those reported previously for a much smaller number of samples.…”
Section: Clay Mineralogysupporting
confidence: 88%
“…Therefore, as measured by this index, the upper end of the range of weathering intensity for Wounded Moose argillic horizons exceeds that of any other central Yukon soils and surficial materials previously reported. The low concentrations of organically complexed Fe and Al in these Bt horizons are comparable with those reported in B horizons of central Yukon Brunisolic soils formed beyond the Reid glacial limit in residual or colluvial parent materials (Bond and Sanborn 2006;Dampier 2010). Although this is consistent with the rarity of Podzolic soils in contemporary Yukon soil landscapes (Smith 2004), Middle Pleistocene buried Podzolic paleosols occur elsewhere in central Yukon (Jackson et al 2000), suggesting that Wounded Moose paleosols may have experienced environments conducive to podzolization during one or more earlier interglacials.…”
Section: Clay Mineralogysupporting
confidence: 76%
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