Mineralogy of gel-like substance in the pumice bed in Kanuma and Kitakami Districts
Open Access
- 1 September 1966
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Soil Science and Plant Nutrition
- Vol. 12 (5) , 19-22
- https://doi.org/10.1080/00380768.1966.10431956
Abstract
A characteristic gel-like substance has been noticed around weathered pumice grains in the pumice beds of Kanuma near Utsunomiya and of Kitakami, Iwate prefecture. This substance was first studied by SHIOIRI (6) in 1934, and reported as allophane according to its chemical composition, refractive index, and dye-adsorbing nature similar to the colloid of volcanic ash soils of the Onji-type. Recently, KUWANO and MATSUI (5) remarked that the colloidal film in the Kanuma and Imaichi pumice beds diffracted x-rays at about 8 and 33 Å, and they presumed that this substance might be an early transitional material from allophane to some crystalline clay minerals. KANNO (2) and KANNO et al. (3) examined this gel-like substance from Imaichi and Kitakami districts precisely by the x-ray diffraction, differential thermal, infrared spectroscopical, electron microscopical, and chemical methods, and they concluded that the substance was a mixture of poorly crystallized montmorillonite, allophane in various weathering stages, and free sesquioxide, although there was no positive evidence of montmorillonite. YOSHINAGA and AOMINE (7) noticed that the properties of imogolite designated by themselves bore a striking likeness to those of the gel-like substance reported by KANNO et al. (3), and they considered that both substances were essentially of the same kind irrespective of occurrence.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- So-called 14 Å clay minerals in some Ando soilsSoil Science and Plant Nutrition, 1966
- Imogolite of Imogo-Layers in KyushuSoil Science and Plant Nutrition, 1965