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Sulfur accumulation rates in volcanic soils of eastern Japan over the last millennium based on tephrochronology

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Publication date: 1 April 2018
Source:Geoderma, Volume 315
Author(s): Toko Tanikawa, Yohey Hashimoto, Noriko Yamaguchi, Masamichi Takahashi, Shuichiro Yoshinaga
Soils have an important role as a reservoir of essential elements for forest ecosystems. Although previous chronosequence studies have determined accumulation rates of several elements in soils, they have not focused on sulfur (S), a secondary macronutrient. We investigated S accumulation rates in five volcanic soils, dated by the use of tephras from the following volcanoes: Mt. Komagatake (tephra Ko-a, 1929 CE), Mt. Tarumae (tephra Ta-a, 1739 CE), Mt. Fuji (tephra F-Ho, 1707 CE), Towada caldera (tephra To-a, 915 CE), and Mt. Haruna (tephra Hr-FP520, 520 CE). The soils were sampled from A horizons formed above the tephra layer, and total S and pedogenic minerals (Ald, Fed, Alo, and Feo) were analyzed to determine the relationships between their estimated pools and soil age. The fractionation of S by oxidation state was determined by S K-edge XANES analysis in constituents of soils from Mt. Komagatake and Mt. Haruna. Our results showed that the S accumulation rate was almost constant over the last millennium. To extend our analysis to longer soil formation times, we extrapolated the S accumulation–age relationship to 10cal. ka and compared the resulting values with previously reported S data from horizons that likely developed during that time period in soils from Mt. Nantai dated by tephra Nt-S (14–15cal. ka). The similarity of the extrapolated values to the Nantai soil values suggests that the S accumulation rate may have been constant since 10cal. ka. In addition, the growth of the S pool with soil age was linearly proportional to the growth of pedogenic mineral pools. Sulfur isotope composition of soil total S depended not on soil age, but rather on the soil origin as indicated by location. The predominant oxidation state of the S fraction changed from reduced to oxidized with soil age during the Holocene. These results suggest that the constant S accumulation rate may reflect the variable influence of exogenous S sources as well as the association of S compounds with pedogenic minerals. Sulfur compounds may accumulate at a constant rate in Japanese volcanic soils as the result of biological transformation followed by retention of S in association with the pedogenic minerals.


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