Paleosols - Geosols
Posted by Charles Tarnocai 17 Jun 1999 19:05:05
From: Charles Tarnocai To: Alexander Makeev Date: June 16, 1999 Subj: Paleosols - Geosols Dear Alexander:
I have been following the debate on paleosols and geosols with mixed feelings. I am a soil scientist and view the question from a pedological point of view. Paleosols are soils developed in a past environment. Some of them are buried and some are on the surface, but not all buried soils are paleosols. We have used the term paleosol in Canada and, to the best of my knowledge, no one has opposed it. As far as I know, the term geosol is not used in soil science. The term paleosol is well embedded in the literature, so it will be used for a long time even if the Commission decides to use the term geosol. In my view, sound pedological knowledge is required to understand paleosols and to carry out proper interpretations using their properties. I have seen geological sections where the soils identified as "paleosols" were only the result of coloration due to groundwaters. I have also seen publications where paleosols were identified, but they were so poorly described that it was highly questionable whether they were soils. I think this is the main problem; changing the name to geosols will not alter anything. Charles Tarnocai Agriculture and Agri-Food Canada Research Branch (ECORC) K.W. Neatby Building, Rm. 1135 960 Carling Avenue OTTAWA, Canada, K1A 0C6 Tel.: (613) 759-1857 Fax: (613) 759-1937 E-mail: tarnocaict@em.agr.ca Smith, C.A.S., C. Tarnocai and O.L. Hughes. 1986. Pedological investigations of Pleistocene glacial drift surfaces in the central Yukon. Geographie Physique et Quaternarie, 15:29-37.
Tarnocai, C. 1987. Quaternary soils. p. 16-23 in: S.R. Morison and C.A.S. Smith (eds.), Guidebook to Quaternary Research in Yukon. XII INQUA Congress, Ottawa, Canada, National Research Council of Canada, Ottawa. Valentine, K.W.G., R.H. King, J.F. Dormaar, W.J. Wreeken, C. Tarnocai, C.R. Kimpe and S.A. Harris. 1987. Some aspects of Quaternary soils in Canada. Canadian Journal of Soil Science, 67:221-247. Smith, C.A.S., G.A. Spiers and C. Tarnocai. 1987. Why are the mid-Pleistocene soils of the central Yukon red? XII INQUA International Congress Abstracts, National Research Council of Canada, Ottawa, p. 266. Tarnocai, C. and K.W.G. Valentine. 1989. Relict soil properties of the Arctic and Subarctic regions of Canada. Catena Supplement 16, p. 9-39. Leckie, D., C. Fox and C. Tarnocai. 1989. Multiple paleosols of the late Albian Boulder Creek Formation, British Columbia, Canada. Sedimentology, 36:307-323. Tarnocai, C. and C.A.S. Smith. 1989. Micromorphology and development of some central Yukon paleosols, Canada. Geoderma, 45:145-162. (LRRC Contrib. No. 89-97) Tarnocai, C. 1989. Paleosols of northwestern Canada. p. 39- 44 in: L.D. Carter, T.D. Hamilton and J.P. Galloway (eds.), Late Cenozoic History of the Interior Basins of Alaska and the Yukon. U.S. Geological Survey Circular 1026. Schnitzer, M., C. Tarnocai, P. Schuppli and H.R. Schulten. 1990. Nature of the organic matter in Tertiary paleosols in the Canadian Arctic. Soil Science, 149:257-267. (LRRC Contrib. No. 89-63) Schnitzer, M., C. Tarnocai, P. Schuppli and H.R. Schulten. 1990. Paleoenvironmental organic indicators in Eocene paleosols from Arctic Canada. Fresenius Journal of Analytical Chemistry, 337:882-884. (LRRC Contrib. No. 90-02) Tarnocai, C. 1990. Paleosols of the interglacial climates in Canada. Geographie physique et Quaternaire, 44:363-374. Tarnocai, C. and C.A.S. Smith. 1991. Paleosols of the fossil forest area, Axel Heiberg Island. p. 171-187 in: R.L. Christie and N.J. McMillan (eds.), Tertiary Fossil Forests of the Geodetic Hills, Axel Heiberg Island, Arctic Archipelago. Geological Survey of Canada Bulletin 403. Tarnocai, C., H. Kodama and C. Fox. 1991. Characteristics and possible origin of the white layers found in the fossil forest deposits, Axel Heiberg Island. p. 189-200 in: R.L. Christie and N.J. McMillan (eds.), Tertiary Fossil Forests of the Geodetic Hills, Axel Heiberg Island, Arctic Archipelago. Geological Survey of Canada Bulletin 403. Tarnocai, C. and C.E. Schweger. 1991. Late Tertiary and early Pleistocene paleosols in northwestern Canada. Arctic, 44:1-11. (LRRC Contrib. No. 90-36) Kodama, H., C.A. Fox, C. Tarnocai and J. Longstaffe. 1992. Platy quartz phytoliths found in the fossil forest deposits, Axel Heiberg Island, Northwest Territories, Canada. Z. Pflanzenern*hr. Bodenk., 155:401-406. Hughes, O.L., C. Tarnocai and C.E. Schweger. 1993. Pleistocene stratigraphy, paleopedology, and paleoecology of a multiple till sequence exposed on the Little Bear River, Western District of Mackenzie, N.W.T., Canada. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 30:851-866. Tarnocai, C., C.A.S. Smith and C.A. Fox. 1993. International Tour of Permafrost Affected Soils: The Yukon and Northwest Territories of Canada. Centre for Land and Biological Resources Research, Research Branch, Agriculture Canada, Ottawa, 197 p. Duk-Rodkin, A., R.W. Barendregt, C. Tarnocai and F.M. Phillips. 1996. Late Tertiary to Quaternary records in the Mackenzie Mountains, Northwest Territories, Canada: stratigraphy, paleosols, paleomagnetism, and chlorine-36. Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences, 33: 875-896. Tarnocai, C. 1997. Paleosols of the northern part of North America: their features and significance as indicators of past climates. In: I.P. Martini (ed.), Late Glacial and Postglacial Environmental Changes: Quaternary, Carboniferous-Permian, and Proterozoic. Oxford University Press, New York, pp. 276- 293. Tarnocai, C. and F. Schweitzer. 1998. Cryogenic features in Canada and Hungary and their significance for past climate. Geografia Fisica e Dinamica Quaternaria, 21(1):87-92. Jackson, L.E, C. Tarnocai and R.J. Mott. (in press). A middle Pleistocene paleosol sequence from Dawson Range, central Yukon Territory. Geographie physique et Quaternaire.
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