Publications des scientifiques de l'IRD

Barbiéro Laurent, Ould Mohamedou A., Furian S., Aventurier A., Marlet S. (2004). The origin of vertisols and their relationship to acid sulfate soils in the Senegal valley. Catena, 59, p. 93-116.

Titre du document
The origin of vertisols and their relationship to acid sulfate soils in the Senegal valley
Année de publication
2004
Type de document
Article
Auteurs
Barbiéro Laurent, Ould Mohamedou A., Furian S., Aventurier A., Marlet S.
Source
Catena, 2004, 59, p. 93-116
In the Senegal valley, it is commonly considered that the Acid Sulfate Soils of the delta are fossil soils overlain by more recent sediments, and that the Vertisols, which abruptly overlie a thick sandy horizon, result from a change in the sedimentation mode of the river. However, we show that both soils belong to the same pedological system extending from the delta to the limit of the last marine transgression. This conclusion is based on (1) the study of soil profiles intermediate between Acid Sulfate Soils and Vertisols along a 100-m sequence in the delta, (2) the mineralogy of the clay fraction ( < 2 Am) in a 200-km transect along the river, and (3) the similarity of the sand size distribution across the textural discontinuity between the horizons. The following processes are involved in the pedological transformations: (1) development of acidity by oxidation of pyrite, (2) neutralization of acidity initially by the carbonate in shell beds, and later by the hydrolysis of easily weatherable silicate clays. The slightly alkaline river water precipitates kaolinite and later smectite at the contact between the strongly acidic and slightly alkaline environments. This results in the formation of a superficial vertic clay horizon surmounting a sandy horizon. Therefore, we emphasize that the soil morphology results from development and control of acidity and not from changes in past climates.
Plan de classement
Pédologie [068]
Description Géographique
SENEGAL
Localisation
Fonds IRD
Identifiant IRD
PAR00007501
Contact