4.5 Article

Aeolian dust accretion outpaces erosion in the formation of Mediterranean alpine soils. New evidence from the periglacial zone of Mount Olympus, Greece

Journal

EARTH SURFACE PROCESSES AND LANDFORMS
Volume -, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1002/esp.5669

Keywords

aeolian dust accretion; alpine soil; erosion; Mediterranean periglacial zone; Mount Olympus; Greece; mineral weathering

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This study investigates the balance between erosion and aeolian dust accretion in the formation of an alpine soil profile in the periglacial zone of Mount Olympus in Greece. The findings reveal that aeolian dust contributes between 50% and 65% to the development of the soil profile. Cryoturbation, weak pedogenesis, and clay mineral alteration also occur within the Mediterranean periglacial zone of Mount Olympus.
Soil formation in Mediterranean periglacial karst landscapes remains poorly understood as the interplay between local and allochthonous sources of parent materials, and mineral alteration and pedogenesis, as dominant post-depositional processes, depends on a variety of climatic and environmental factors. Herein, we investigate the balance between erosion and aeolian dust accretion in the formation of an alpine soil profile in the periglacial zone of Mount Olympus in Greece. We applied a wide range of analytical methods to 23 samples, from a soil profile developed in a glaciokarstic plateau, from colluvial sediment horizons interbedded in postglacial scree slopes of different maturity and formation age and from modern Sahara dust samples deposited on the snowpack. Colluvial sediment horizons exhibit high concentrations of carbonate gravel and calcite-rich sand and represent the local erosion products. The soil B horizon developed on the glaciokarstic plateau, contains high amounts of fine earth and is rich in quartz, mica, plagioclase, clays and Fe-Ti oxides. Based on physical and textural characteristics, the soil profile is partitioned in a surficial weathered Bw and an illuvial Bt horizon that overlies the local regolith composed of fragmented glacial till and slope wash deposits. Radiogenic isotope systematics, textural and mineralogical analysis show that the contribution of aeolian (Sahara and locally sourced) dust to the development of the soil B horizon ranges between 50% and 65%. Cryoturbation results in fine earth translocation from Bw to the Bt horizon, whereas weak pedogenetic modifications of detrital (aeolian and bedrock-derived) minerals result in magnetic mineral weathering and secondary clay formation. Our findings reveal that aeolian dust accretion from Saharan and lcal sources is the dominant process in providing alpine soil parent material and that cryoturbation, weak pedogenesis and clay mineral alteration occur within the Mediterranean periglacial zone of Mount Olympus.

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