Summary
Examination of a range of naturally occurring calcium carbonates and calcareous soils has shown that insoluble sulphate associated with calcium carbonate may comprise an important fraction of soil sulphur. One soil contained as much as 93 per cent of its sulphur in this form. It seems likely that this sulphate occurs as a co-precipitated or co-crystallized impurity in the calcium carbonate.
Most surface soils had only low capacity to adsorb sulphate and contained only small amounts of sulphur in this form. Two acid surface soils and many acid subsoils, however, adsorbed sulphate quite strongly and in some acid subsoil clays adsorbed sulphate made up an important fractions of the total sulphur.
Sulphate adsorption was found to be negligible above pH 6.5 and adsorbed sulphate may be determined by aqueous extraction after increasing the pH above this value by addition of solid calcium carbonate. Adsorption of sulphate during acid extraction of soils can lead to low values in the determination of acid-soluble sulphates. Sulphate so adsorbed can be determined by a second extraction with water after the addition of solid calcium carbonate to increase the pH to a value greater than 6.5.
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Williams, C.H., Steinbergs, A. The evaluation of plant-available sulphur in soils. Plant Soil 17, 279–294 (1962). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01377668
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01377668