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Soil Research Soil Research Society
Soil, land care and environmental research
RESEARCH ARTICLE

Pseudogley in Gundaroo Subsola, Southern Tablelands, New South Wales

Dijk DC Van

Australian Journal of Soil Research 7(2) 143 - 161
Published: 1969

Abstract

The genesis is discussed of a range of pedological differentiations which occur unusually deep in the soil and characterize low, but not the lowest, catenary segments of the Gundaroo pedomorpholith. This soil layer forms a large part of the soil mantle on the Southern Tablelands and is of considerable age. The deep-seated differentiations have developed as separate 'accessory' features below red-yellow and meadow podzolic, prairie soil, and red-earth sola of normal depth (2-4 ft). The zone in which they occur is termed the 'subsolum'. The features are dominated by vertical patterns related to planar and tubular voids. They include, besides a range of sesquioxidic forms, conspicuous clay differentiations comprising pronounced cutans and up to 1-1 1/2 in. wide vertical clay veins and well-developed pedality with thick colloid coatings. These features are believed to represent 'descendant' pseudogley and to be related to an unusually dynamic palaeoclimatic regime.

https://doi.org/10.1071/SR9690143

© CSIRO 1969

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