Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
9463184 Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 2005 18 Pages PDF
Abstract
Late Pleistocene and early Holocene paleosols are described from construction pits and boreholes in the northern Kyonggi Bay, west coast of Korea. Thin-section petrography, chemistry, clay mineralogy and geotechnical properties of the paleosols were examined to infer relative sea-level fluctuations during the late Quaternary. Relict laminae and gradational contacts with underlying tidal rhythmites confirm that the late Pleistocene paleosol is a pedogenically altered tidal deposit. Illuvial clay coatings, rootlets and enrichment of kaolinite and chemically stable oxides indicate that pedogenesis occurred on a well-drained, stable surface during the last glacial period. Redoximorphic features, such as drab-colored root traces and sphaerosiderite, however, suggest that waterlogged conditions developed temporarily due to a rise of the water table at the end of the last glacial period. As sea level rose, an early Holocene paleosol formed in freshwater bog deposits, burying the late Pleistocene paleosol. The early Holocene paleosol has abundant sphaerosiderites and organic material. The presence of weakly developed illuvial clay coatings, oxidized siderites and pellets, however, indicates oxidizing condition associated with water-table fall occurred during the early Holocene. Despite the similarity in the degree of chemical and clay mineralogical weathering, the late Pleistocene paleosol is distinguished from its early Holocene counterpart by thicker and more abundant illuvial clay coatings, more Fe2O3 and a greater degree of consolidation. Duration of pedogenesis might be a primary cause for the difference of the pedofeatures with climate playing a secondary role. The widespread presence of similar late Pleistocene paleosols highlights its significance as a key stratigraphic marker for regional correlations along the west coast of Korea.
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering Earth and Planetary Sciences Earth-Surface Processes
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