## Abstract Large infiltration ponds (10β15 m^2^) were used, in conjunction with a ring infiltrometer and a well permeameter, to determine the infiltration characteristics of a complex lateritic soil profile in the jarrah (__Eucalyptus marginata__) forest of Western Australia. Simultaneous measurem
Engineering properties of a lateritic soil profile
β Scribed by Umarany Mahalinga-Iyer; David J. Williams
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 1991
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 894 KB
- Volume
- 31
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0013-7952
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β¦ Synopsis
The classification properties and composition of a lateritic soil, developed on Tertiary basalt in coastal south-east Queensland, Australia, have been investigated. X-ray diffraction analyses showed that the soil comprised kaolinite, quartz, gibbsite and haematite. Chemical analyses showed there was no amorphous material present in the soil. The results of electron scanning microscopy revealed that sesquioxides coat and bind the clayey constituents of the lateritic soil into porous micro-aggregations. Analyses of the grain size distribution and other physical properties indicated that the soil was not homogeneous within the laterite zone. Atterberg limit test results for the soil plotted anomalously below the Casagrande A-line. There were significant differences between the values of plasticity index determined for air-dried compared with oven-dried samples. High values for both the liquid and plastic limits were due to the water retention capacity of porous micro-aggregations in the soil. This was correlated with the degree of laterisation, which depends on the ambient climate, topography and vegetation of the area.
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