Jk. Eyre et Dpe. Dickson, MOSSBAUER-SPECTROSCOPY ANALYSIS OF IRON-CONTAINING MINERALS IN THE CHINESE LOESS, J GEO R-SOL, 100(B9), 1995, pp. 17925-17930
Chinese loess has been analyzed in bulk, using Mossbauer spectroscopy,
in order to investigate the effects of climate on the overall iron-co
ntaining mineralogy. Strongly weathered loess is found to differ from
weakly weathered loess in two significant respects. It contains a much
larger content of fine-grained (superparamagnetic) hematite and the r
atio of paramagnetic Fe3+/Fe2+ is substantially increased. The suggest
ion is that weathering results in the liberation of Fe from silicate m
inerals and the formation of fine-grained hematite. Measurements of to
tal iron content by atomic absorption spectrometry highlight that the
strongly weathered loess has a higher content of iron than the weakly
weathered loess, and that this is too large an effect to be explained
by the leaching of carbonate. The indication is that the mineralogy of
the dust input to the loess plateau varies as a function of climate.
One possibility is that the grain size (and hence mineralogy) of the d
ust fluctuates in response to vegetational cover in proximal source ar
eas. During interglacial times the vegetational cover would expand to
stabilize these proximal sources, resulting in a bias to finer dust fr
om more distant sources. Thus the mechanisms linking climate and miner
alogy in the Chinese loess may be more complex than previously thought
.