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Whitehead
Iodine in soil profiles in relation to iron and aluminium oxides and organic matterWhitehead DC European Journal of Soil Science. 29(1), pp 88-94. March 1978 [abstract only]
"The iodine content in successive 10 cm horizons of eighteen soil profiles from England and Wales was determined and correlated with contents of 'free' aluminium and iron oxides (oxalate-soluble) and organic matter.
"The pattern of change in iodine content with depth varied considerably with soil type. In the rendzina soils, the content was relatively high in the surface 10 cm but declined markedly with depth. In the podsols, iodine was low at the surface but increased in the B horizon: in one of these soils an iron pan of about 1 cm thickness had an iodine content as high as 37.6 mg/kg. In two soils derived from Ordovician, and one from igneous, rock material, the iodine content was relatively high (up to 25 mg/kg) with maximum values at intermediate depths. In contrast, soils derived from river alluvium and from lowland clays generally had low iodine contents (< 6 mg/kg) which showed little variation with depth in the profile. In a peat soil the iodine content was relatively high in the horizons above 60 cm but was low (1. 3 mg/kg) in the underlying clay.
"In all 154 samples from the eighteen sites, iodine content was closely correlated with oxalate-soluble aluminium (r = 0.834***) but not with oxalate-soluble iron (r = 0. 35) or organic matter (r = 0.37). However, in the five most acidic soils, with pH below 4. 8, the iodine content was more closely correlated with iron than with aluminium."
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