4.7 Article

Maghemite quantification and magnetic signature of Brazilian soils with contrasting parent materials

Journal

APPLIED CLAY SCIENCE
Volume 161, Issue -, Pages 385-394

Publisher

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.clay.2018.05.014

Keywords

Soil magnetism; Iron oxides; Tropical soils; Mafic rocks

Funding

  1. CAPES Foundation (Brazilian Ministry of Education) [PDSE 88881-132582/2016-01]
  2. National Council for Scientific and Technological Development (CNPq - MCT/CNPq) [23/2009]
  3. Minas Gerais State Agency for Research and Development (FAPEMIG) [PPM-00132-14]
  4. Spain's Ministry of Economy and Competitiveness [AGL 2017-87074-C2-2-R]

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Maghemite (Mh) is a ferrimagnetic mineral that governs magnetism in the clay fraction, especially in well weathered soils from tropical and subtropical regions. In this work, we assessed different methods for Mh quantification [1: area of the reflections obtained by X-ray diffraction (XRD) (standard method); 2: Rietveld refinement; 3: selective dissolution with H2SO4 and; 4: magnetic susceptibility (chi)) by application to Brazilian soils with contrasting parent materials (itabirite, basalt, gabbro, tuffite, gneiss and amphibolite). The methods based on H2SO4 dissolution were found to overestimate the Mh content with respect to the standard method based on X-ray diffraction. This was particularly so with samples from gneiss and amphibolite and samples with higher contents in poorly crystalline Fe oxides. Mh contents based on magnetic susceptibility measurements or the XRD-Rietveld refinement were closer to those provided by the standard method. Mh was found to accumulate in well weathered soils and soils with a high Fe2O3 content. Exception were soils from tuffite, which had high Fe2O3 contents (similar to 330 g kg(-1)), exhibited low Mh levels (similar to 5.5 g kg(-1)). Irrespective of the parent material, Mh particles typically fall in a single domain magnetic behavior; however, they can also acquire multidomain characteristics, probably as a result of isomorphic substitution and aggregation with hematite.

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