Comparison of immiscibly displaced soil solutions and saturated paste extracts from saline soils

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Abstract

Soil solutions from four salt-affected soils in Alberta were extracted by immiscible displacement from field moist soils and saturated pastes after air-drying. Considerable variation was seen between the properties of saturated paste extracts and immiscibly displaced solutions, with the saturated paste extracts having lower conductivities and Na, Mg, K and anion concentrations. The differences in composition between the two extraction methods resulted in differences in ion speciation, sodium adsorption ratio and exchangeable sodium percentage values and mineral stabilities. Saturation indices for evaporite minerals were poor predictors of minerals formed in evaporated soil solutions. It was also found that even in chemically similar solutions, different minerals precipitated, and therefore the prediction of evaporite mineral formation from extracted soil solutions is not recommended. -from Authors

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Kohut, C. K., & Dudas, M. J. (1994). Comparison of immiscibly displaced soil solutions and saturated paste extracts from saline soils. Canadian Journal of Soil Science, 74(4), 409–419. https://doi.org/10.4141/cjss94-054

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