Agricultural soil (Ap-horizon, 0-20 cm) samples were collected from a large part of Europe (33 countries, 5.6 million km2) as part of the GEMAS (GEochemical Mapping of Agricultural and grazing land Soil) soil mapping project. The soil data have been used to provide a general view of element mobility and source rocks at the continental scale, either by reference to average crustal abundances or to normalised patterns of element mobility during weathering processes. The survey area includes a diverse group of soil parent materials with varying geological history, a wide range of climate zones, and landscapes.Total concentrations of Rb, Ga, and Cs in European soil were determined by XRF (X-ray fluorescence spectrometry). In addition, hot aqua regia available element concentrations were analysed by inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry ICP-MS. Their spatial distribution patterns are shown in geochemical maps. The spatial distribution of Rb, Ga and Cs in Ap soil is quite comparable for the aqua regia and XRF results. The Cs spatial pattern reflects best the large difference between trace element concentrations in northern Europe with predominantly low concentrations and southern Europe with approximately two times higher values. The maximum extent of the last glaciation is visible as a clear concentration break on the map. Lithology of the underlying bedrock is inferred as the major source of geochemical anomalies. In search for characterising the soil parent material and degree of weathering, the soil data were examined for Ga and Cs using two methods. First, the estimated degree of extractability DE. i of an element in a sample was calculated by dividing aqua regia available concentrations by the total concentrations obtained by XRF analysis for Al, Na, Ca, K, Rb, Ga and Cs. The different DE. i were investigated for 10 geological parent material subgroups (alkaline rocks, granite, calcareous rocks, basalt-mafic rocks, unclassified lithologies, Precambrian granitic gneiss bedrocks, loess, organic soils, schist and soil developed on coarse-grained sandy deposits). The role of clay as main carrier of Ga and Cs phases was inferred for soils developed on several types of bedrock such as granite, gneiss and alkaline rocks. Additionally, an affinity of Cs for loess and carbonate rocks has been observed.

Négrel, P., Ladenberger, A., Reimann, C., Birke, M., Sadeghi, M., The GEMAS Project Team: S. Albanese, M.A. (2018). Distribution of Rb, Ga and Cs in agricultural land soils at European continental scale (GEMAS): Implications for weathering conditions and provenance. CHEMICAL GEOLOGY, 479, 188-203 [10.1016/j.chemgeo.2018.01.009].

Distribution of Rb, Ga and Cs in agricultural land soils at European continental scale (GEMAS): Implications for weathering conditions and provenance

E. Dinelli;
2018

Abstract

Agricultural soil (Ap-horizon, 0-20 cm) samples were collected from a large part of Europe (33 countries, 5.6 million km2) as part of the GEMAS (GEochemical Mapping of Agricultural and grazing land Soil) soil mapping project. The soil data have been used to provide a general view of element mobility and source rocks at the continental scale, either by reference to average crustal abundances or to normalised patterns of element mobility during weathering processes. The survey area includes a diverse group of soil parent materials with varying geological history, a wide range of climate zones, and landscapes.Total concentrations of Rb, Ga, and Cs in European soil were determined by XRF (X-ray fluorescence spectrometry). In addition, hot aqua regia available element concentrations were analysed by inductively coupled plasma-mass spectrometry ICP-MS. Their spatial distribution patterns are shown in geochemical maps. The spatial distribution of Rb, Ga and Cs in Ap soil is quite comparable for the aqua regia and XRF results. The Cs spatial pattern reflects best the large difference between trace element concentrations in northern Europe with predominantly low concentrations and southern Europe with approximately two times higher values. The maximum extent of the last glaciation is visible as a clear concentration break on the map. Lithology of the underlying bedrock is inferred as the major source of geochemical anomalies. In search for characterising the soil parent material and degree of weathering, the soil data were examined for Ga and Cs using two methods. First, the estimated degree of extractability DE. i of an element in a sample was calculated by dividing aqua regia available concentrations by the total concentrations obtained by XRF analysis for Al, Na, Ca, K, Rb, Ga and Cs. The different DE. i were investigated for 10 geological parent material subgroups (alkaline rocks, granite, calcareous rocks, basalt-mafic rocks, unclassified lithologies, Precambrian granitic gneiss bedrocks, loess, organic soils, schist and soil developed on coarse-grained sandy deposits). The role of clay as main carrier of Ga and Cs phases was inferred for soils developed on several types of bedrock such as granite, gneiss and alkaline rocks. Additionally, an affinity of Cs for loess and carbonate rocks has been observed.
2018
Négrel, P., Ladenberger, A., Reimann, C., Birke, M., Sadeghi, M., The GEMAS Project Team: S. Albanese, M.A. (2018). Distribution of Rb, Ga and Cs in agricultural land soils at European continental scale (GEMAS): Implications for weathering conditions and provenance. CHEMICAL GEOLOGY, 479, 188-203 [10.1016/j.chemgeo.2018.01.009].
Négrel, Philippe*; Ladenberger, Anna; Reimann, Clemens; Birke, Manfred; Sadeghi, Martiya; The GEMAS Project Team: S. Albanese, M. Andersson, R. Baritz...espandi
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11585/625037
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