Site Information

Site number:
750
Authors:
IBC, GGC, DSS
Date recorded:
1994/01/12
Reason Sampled:
Soil contamination studies Vanda Station from a series of sites spaced 1m apart; to determine if contaminants are being redistributed through the soils as a result of capillary movement and evaporation of moisture
Description:
VT1 4; greywater gully, 45 m to the south east of Vanda Station buildings and at the northeastern end of the gully; the site is near the centre of the gully, 3 m to the south east of VT1 1
Altitude:
92 m
Aspect:
NW
Slope:
1 °
Location Data
Observer IBC GGC
GPS No
Latitude Longitude DMS 77° 31.3' S 161° 40.4' E 77° 0.0' S 161° 40.12' E
Latitude Longitude DD -77.5217 161.6730 -77.000 161.66867
Latitude longitude precision DD 0.0008 0.0008 0.008 0.00008
Locality Vanda Station, Wright Valley
Survey not recorded

Climate

Soil climate zone:
Central Mountain
Estimated mean annual temperature:
-20 °C
Frozen ground depth:
0 cm
Frozen type:
Frozen comment:

Geology

Geological setting:
The rocks of the area are granodiorites that have been cut with lamprophyre dykes and form a strongly undulating ridge and gully topography as a result of ice over riding from down-valley and up-valley glaciations, and to a lesser extent, of subaerial weathering; subsequent to glaciation, the terrain has been subjected to submergence and emergence from fluctuating lake water levels from Lake Vanda with some associated sorting and resorting of surface materials; bedrock is at shallow depth on the gully floor
Patterned ground:
Nil
Surface weathering or surface features:
A loose granular to small pebble unweathered pavement

Soil

Soil parent material:
Pebbly to granular sand with some boulders over granodiorite bedrock
Previous disturbance:
Site disturbance from previous activities at Vanda Station probably includes some soil contamination from greywater discharges; site probably under water earlier in the season
Soil weathering stage:
6 1 (Campbell & Claridge 1975)
Soil moisture status:
Xerous; the soil is moist throughout, most probably as a result of seepage from rising lake waters and capillary flow from a subsurface water table
Biological activity:
None observed

Sample Data

Physical Data
Sample nameDepth descriptionTop (cm)Base (cm)Bulk DensityDry Bulk DensityGravimetric MoistureVol. Moisture (BD=2)
750a 0-5cm 0 5 No
750b 5-10cm 5 10 No
750c 10-15cm 10 15 No
Sample solution chemistry
Sample namepHNa meq/100gCa meq/100gMg meq/100gK meq/100gCl meq/100gSO4 meq/100gNO3 meq/100gEC mmho/cmSoluble SaltNotes
750a . 1.64 3.03 1.4 0.11 4.89 1.19 0.15 . .  
750b . 0.32 0.27 0.21 0.08 0.4 0.14 0.01 . .  
750c . 0.22 0.29 0.13 0.11 0.28 0.23 0.0 . .  
Particle size distribution
Sample name< 2 mm2 - 0.5 mm0.5 - 0.25 mm0.25 - 0.1 mm0.1 - 0.05 mm0.05 - 0.02 mm0.02 - 0.002 mm< 0.002 mmFe2O3CaCO3Notes
750a
750b
750c
Clay Mineralogy
Sample nameMicaIHMHIV - IHMICHLVTHIVCHLSMCHL SMFE - CHLHTQTZFLDHBCALNotes
750a :
750b :
750c :
National Soil Archive Samples
Sample nameNSA Sample IdContainer typeFraction type
750a M22/4257 White lid small oven dry
750a M22/4258 medium
750b M22/4260 White lid small oven dry
750b M22/4261 medium
750c M22/4263 White lid small oven dry
750c M22/4264 medium
750a M22/4256 large mixed
750b M22/4259 large mixed
750c M22/4262 large mixed

Photos

Photo record:
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