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<title>Earth and Environmental Sciences Faculty Publications</title>
<copyright>Copyright (c) 2013 Northeastern University All rights reserved.</copyright>
<link>http://iris.lib.neu.edu/ees_fac_pubs</link>
<description>Recent documents in Earth and Environmental Sciences Faculty Publications</description>
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<title>Soil development and glacial history, West Fork of Beaver Creek, Uinta Mountains, Utah</title>
<link>http://iris.lib.neu.edu/ees_fac_pubs/1</link>
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<pubDate>Thu, 27 Jan 2011 14:35:58 PST</pubDate>

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		<p>The dominant mechanisms of soil formation on a sequence of Smiths Fork, Blacks Fork, and Pre–Blacks Fork moraines in West Fork of Beaver Creek, Uinta Mountains, Utah, (equivalent to Pinedale, Bull Lake, and Pre–Bull Lake moraines of the Wind River Range, respectively) are clay translocation (argilluviation), increasing soil redness (rubification), and the accumulation of organic matter (melanization) and silt-sized particles. The quantity of clay-sized particles and degree of soil redness increase with soil age, but clay accumulation may plateau in the oldest soils. In contrast, the quantity of accumulated organic matter and abundance of silt-sized particles do not appear to...
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<author>Daniel C. Douglass</author>


<category>Soil formation</category>

<category>Glaciology</category>

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