Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Adapting and Verifying the Liming Index for Enhanced Rock Weathering Minerals as an Alternative Liming Approach

View through CrossRef
Acidic soils limit plant nutrient availability, leading to deficiencies and reduced crop yields. Agricultural liming agents address these issues and are crucial for deploying silicate amendments used in enhanced rock weathering (ERW) for carbon sequestration and emission reduction. Grower recommendations for liming agents are based on the liming index (LI), which combines the neutralizing value (NV) and fineness rating (FR) to predict a mineral’s acidity neutralization relative to pure calcite. However, the LI was originally developed for carbonate minerals, and its applicability to silicates remains uncertain, with studies often yielding inconclusive results on soil carbon and liming efficiency. This study aims to evaluate the liming efficiency of silicates. We determined the LI of five candidate ERW minerals (basalt, olivine, wollastonite, kimberlite, and montmorillonite) and compared them to pure calcite. Post-NV acid digestion, we characterized the minerals and soils, applying nonparametric statistical tests (Wilcoxon, Kendall) to correlate liming results with LI, dosage, and amendment methods. We developed an empirical model incorporating mineralogy and kinetics to explain silicate behavior in liming, considering soil, climate, and crop factors.
Title: Adapting and Verifying the Liming Index for Enhanced Rock Weathering Minerals as an Alternative Liming Approach
Description:
Acidic soils limit plant nutrient availability, leading to deficiencies and reduced crop yields.
Agricultural liming agents address these issues and are crucial for deploying silicate amendments used in enhanced rock weathering (ERW) for carbon sequestration and emission reduction.
Grower recommendations for liming agents are based on the liming index (LI), which combines the neutralizing value (NV) and fineness rating (FR) to predict a mineral’s acidity neutralization relative to pure calcite.
However, the LI was originally developed for carbonate minerals, and its applicability to silicates remains uncertain, with studies often yielding inconclusive results on soil carbon and liming efficiency.
This study aims to evaluate the liming efficiency of silicates.
We determined the LI of five candidate ERW minerals (basalt, olivine, wollastonite, kimberlite, and montmorillonite) and compared them to pure calcite.
Post-NV acid digestion, we characterized the minerals and soils, applying nonparametric statistical tests (Wilcoxon, Kendall) to correlate liming results with LI, dosage, and amendment methods.
We developed an empirical model incorporating mineralogy and kinetics to explain silicate behavior in liming, considering soil, climate, and crop factors.

Related Results

Riverine water chemistry and rock weathering processes of Qingyi River basin, a subtropical basin in east China
Riverine water chemistry and rock weathering processes of Qingyi River basin, a subtropical basin in east China
To investigate the rock weathering processes in silicate-dominated subtropical basin in east China, we analyzed major ion compositions of rivers and precipitation samples in the Qi...
Adapting and Verifying the Liming Index for Enhanced Rock Weathering Minerals as an Alternative Liming Approach
Adapting and Verifying the Liming Index for Enhanced Rock Weathering Minerals as an Alternative Liming Approach
Acidic soils limit plant nutrient availability, leading to deficiencies and reduced crop yields. Agricultural liming agents address these issues and are crucial for deploying silic...
Does Plant Growth accelerate Rock Weathering?
Does Plant Growth accelerate Rock Weathering?
<p>A common paradigm holds that, to satisfy mineral nutrient demand, plants and associated soil microbiota accelerate rock weathering which in turn aids to regulate t...
Weathering‐pedogenesis of Carbonate Rocks and Its Environmental Effects in Subtropical Region
Weathering‐pedogenesis of Carbonate Rocks and Its Environmental Effects in Subtropical Region
AbstractWe investigated the weathering‐pedogenesis of carbonate rocks and its environmental effects in subtropical regions of China. The investigation demonstrated that the weather...
Granite Weathering
Granite Weathering
Weathering is a necessary precursor for landform development. However, in the context of granite it acquires a particular importance for various reasons. First, many granite terrai...
Detecting Deep Rock Weathering
Detecting Deep Rock Weathering
<p>The weathering front, the interface beneath Earth’s surface where unweathered bedrock is converted into weathered rock, is a zone where chemical dise...
Reliability-based design (RBD) of shallow foundations on rock masses
Reliability-based design (RBD) of shallow foundations on rock masses
[ACCESS RESTRICTED TO THE UNIVERSITY OF MISSOURI AT AUTHOR'S REQUEST.] The reliability-based design (RBD) approach that separately accounts for variability and uncertainty in load(...
Mineralogy
Mineralogy
Soils are weathering products of rocks and minerals. The rocks in Earth’s outer surface can be classified as igneous, sedimentary, or metamorphic rocks. Igneous rocks are formed fr...

Back to Top