312-1 Stable Carbon Isotope Composition of Calcite and Organic Matter From Californian Soils: Implications for CO2 Reconstructions.
See more from this Division: S09 Soil MineralogySee more from this Session: Symposium--S9/S5 Joint Symposium On Ecosystem-Mineral Interactions: I
The hydrology of these profiles is divided into two broad groups: (1) soils characterized by gravity-driven, piston-type, vertical flow through the profile and (2) soils affected by groundwater within the profile at depths where calcite is present. The difference between soil calcite and organic matter δ13C values, Δ13Ccc-om, is smaller for profiles affected by groundwater saturation, as well as for most Vertisols. Smaller Δ13Ccc-om values are interpreted as the product of water logging and limited diffusion of CO2 out of, and into, the soil, resulting in relatively higher concentrations of soil-respired CO2.
Larger Δ13Ccc-om values in soils with gravity-driven flow are consistent with open-system mixing of tropospheric CO2 and soil-respired CO2, with soil PCO2 values potentially ranging from ~400 to ~20,000 ppmV at the time of calcite crystallization. There is a positive correlation between soil PCO2 estimates and a value named Eppt-U (kJm-2yr-1) that represents energy flux through the soil during periods of soil moisture utilization and is the product of water mass and temperature in the profile during the growing season. Thus, soils characterized by high water storage and high growing season temperatures may form pedogenic calcite under conditions of high soil CO2 concentration resulting from high rates of biological productivity and vice versa.
See more from this Session: Symposium--S9/S5 Joint Symposium On Ecosystem-Mineral Interactions: I