Bioturbation and erosion rates along the soil-hillslope conveyor belt, part 1: Insights from single-grain feldspar luminescence
Author
Román Sánchez, Andrea
Reiman, Tony
Wallinga, Jakob
Vanwalleghem, Tom
Publisher
WileyDate
2019Subject
BioturbationErosion
Soil formation
Feldspar luminescence
Critical Zone
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Show full item recordAbstract
The interplay of bioturbation, soil production and long-term erosion–deposition in soil and landscape co-evolution is
poorly understood. Single-grain post-infrared infrared stimulated luminescence (post-IR IRSL) measurements on sand-sized grains of
feldspar from the soil matrix can provide direct information on all three processes. To explore the potential of this novel method, we
propose a conceptual model of how post-IR IRSL-derived burial age and fraction of surface-visiting grains change with soil depth and
along a hillslope catena. We then tested this conceptual model by comparison with post-IR IRSL results for 15 samples taken at dif-
ferent depths within four soil profiles along a hillslope catena in the Santa Clotilde Critical Zone Observatory (southern Spain).
In our work, we observed clear differences in apparent post-IR IRSL burial age distributions with depth along the catena, with
younger ages and more linear age–depth structure for the hill-base profile, indicating the influence of lateral deposition processes.
We noted shallower soils and truncated burial age–depth functions for the two erosional mid-slope profiles, and an exponential de-
cline of burial age with depth for the hill-top profile. We suggest that the downslope increase in the fraction of surface-visiting grains
at intermediate depths (20 cm) indicates creep to be the dominant erosion process.
Our study demonstrates that single-grain feldspar luminescence signature-depth profiles provide a new way of tracing vertical and
lateral soil mixing and transport processes. In addition, we propose a new objective luminescence-based criterion for mapping the
soil-bedrock boundary, thus producing soil depths in better agreement with geomorphological process considerations. Our work
highlights the possibilities of feldspar single grain techniques to provide quantitative insights into soil production, bioturbation and
erosion–deposition.