4.7 Article

Provenance of quartz grains from soils over Quaternary terraces along the Guadalquivir River, Spain

Journal

GEODERMA
Volume 414, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.geoderma.2022.115769

Keywords

Provenance study; Quartz cathodoluminescence; Quartz trace elements; Quartz microinclusions; Soil; Guadalquivir valley

Categories

Funding

  1. Ministerio de Economia, Industria y Competitividad de Espana [CGL2016-80308-P]
  2. MCIN/AEI [BES-2017-080078]
  3. Universidad de Granada/CBUA
  4. FSE El FSE invierte en tu futuro

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This paper examines the quartz grains in soils from the Quaternary fluvial terraces of the Guadalquivir River in southern Spain. Through analysis of the quartz grains' characteristics, the study sheds light on the sedimentological history of the terraces and discusses the spatial and temporal changes in the catchment area.
The characterisation of quartz grains' chemical and mineralogical properties in sediments and sedimentary rocks is widely used in provenance studies. This paper analyses quartz grains from the coarse sand fraction in soils in Quaternary fluvial terraces (Guadalquivir River, southern Spain). The tentative soil ages are 0.3 ka (Haplic Fluvisol), 7 ka (Haplic Calcisol), 70 ka (Cutanic Luvisol), 300 ka (Lixic Calcisol) and 600 ka (Cutanic Luvisol). The quartz grains analyses shed light on the sedimentological history of these terraces. Scanning electron microscope cathodoluminescence (SEM-CL) characteristics, micro inclusion inventory established by Energydispersive X-ray spectroscopy (SEM-EDX) and trace element contents determined with laser ablation inductively coupled plasma mass spectrometry (LA-ICP-MS) of quartz grains permitted distinguishing six types of grains in the soils studied: metamorphic quartz (type 1), undeformed granitic quartz (type 2), strongly altered granitic quartz (type 3), recrystallised (deformed) granitic quartz (type 4), sandstone-derived quartz (type 5) and hydrothermal quartz grains (type 6). Metamorphic quartz grains (type 1) come from the Sierra Morena (Iberian Massif) and Sierra Nevada (Internal Betic Zone). Granitic quartz grains (types 2 to 4) come from Los Pedroches batholith and its associated plutons (Santa Elena and Linares). The sandstone-derived quartz type 5 comes from the numerous sandstone outcrops scattered in the central catchment area of the Guadalquivir River. Finally, hydrothermal quartz grains (type 6) originate from hydrothermal veins associated with subvolcanic rocks of the Los Pedroches batholith. Variations were noted in the proportions of quartz types in soils of different ages, attributed to spatial and temporal changes in the catchment area. The most remarkable change occurred between 500 and 240 ka ago when the catchment area extended into Sierra Nevada's metamorphic rocks, well reflected in type 1 content (lower in P2, P4, P5 and PM) and their characteristics (quartz with less healed fractures, less Al content, bigger mica microinclusions, smaller Al/Ti ratio) in the post-500-240 ka soils. Our study shows that the combined study of SEM-CL characteristics, micro inclusions (SEM-EDX), and trace element contents (LA-ICP-MS) of quartz grains is an efficient approach for characterising the provenance of quartz grains in the sand fraction of soils.

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