Article

Changes in sulphate retention, soil chemistry and drainage water quality along an upland soil transect

Details

Citation

Sanger LJ, Billett M & Cresser MS (1994) Changes in sulphate retention, soil chemistry and drainage water quality along an upland soil transect. Environmental Pollution, 86 (2), pp. 119-128. https://doi.org/10.1016/0269-7491%2894%2990182-1

Abstract
Soils sampled along an altitudinal transect in an upland area of North East Scotland have been used to investigate downslope changes in the capacity of soils to retain sulphate. Simulated laboratory experiments involving the leaching of reconstituted cores with ‘rainfall' containing low (1·85 mg litre-1 and high (51·90 mg litre-1 concentrations of sulphate indicate that soils developed on upper slopes have a limited capacity to adsorb sulphate, whereas soils on lower slopes have a much greater sulphate adsorption capacity. Soil drainage water, produced from ‘sensitive' upper slope soils may therefore be significantly modified by physico-chemical reactions in lower slopes before reaching watercourses.

Journal
Environmental Pollution: Volume 86, Issue 2

StatusPublished
Publication date31/12/1994
PublisherElsevier
ISSN0269-7491