Poster Number 1039
See more from this Division: S05 PedologySee more from this Session: General Pedology
Wednesday, November 3, 2010
Long Beach Convention Center, Exhibit Hall BC, Lower Level
Soils provide a record earth system processes that leads to an understanding of the land and the dynamic processes that formed it. An upland interfluve was investigated in a loess-mantled, pre-Illinoian glaciated landscape near Lincoln, NE. The site retains a record of the stratigraphic, pedologic and paleo-topographic relationships of multiple depositional and soil development episodes. Peoria-aged loess overlies a Loveland loess unit that consists largely of reworked, loess derived slope alluvium, channel-fills, rather than primary air-fall deposits. These in turn cap a pre-Wisconsin paleosol developed in an erosional pedisediment, which overly a weathered, paleosol-capped Pre-Illinoian till. Site morphology details a dynamic, varied landscape history.
See more from this Division: S05 PedologySee more from this Session: General Pedology