SOIL-FORMING RATES AND PROCESSES ON QUATERNARY MORAINES NEAR LAGO BUENOS AIRES, ARGENTINA
Age related differences in soil development on moraines were tested with ANOVA. A-horizon OC quantities increase with age (1.3, 1.4, 2.4 and 2.4 kg/m2 for the four groups) and are statistically different at the p=0.001 confidence level. This may be partially related to the slightly higher elevations of the older moraines, which therefore experience more precipitation and less evapotranspiration. The maximum carbonate morphology stage (II, III, III+, and III+), thickness of the calcic (Bk) horizons (46, 60, 57, and 62 cm), and mean profile development indices (89, 110, 116, and 110 index units.cm) follow increases of calcium carbonate accumulation with age (3.3, 16.6, 42.1 and 31.8 kg/m2). The younger 3 groups differ from one another at the p=0.003 and p=0.05 level, however the 2 oldest groups are statistically similar. Long-term rates of carbonate accumulation are similar for the youngest three moraine groups but are much lower for the oldest group (183, 118, and 140 as opposed to 40 g/m2/kyr; different at the p=0.003 level).
The implications of these data are: 1) soil OC appears to be stable in this environment and profile quantities of OC continue to increase over very long time periods, 2) rates of carbonate influx in this area are less than in other areas (e.g. arid southwest), and 3) carbonate influx has been constant for the last few glacial-interglacial cycles, but an equilibrium in total carbonate is approached after ~800 kyr.