กก |
Can. J. Earth Sci., 12(1975), 1794-1804 USE OF FACTOR ANALYSIS IN INTERPRETING GENETIC PROCESSES IN LACUSTRINE SOILS OF ONTARIO, CANADA I.P. MARTINI1 and C.J. ACTON2 1Department of Land Resource Science, University of Guelph, Guelph, Ontario
N1G 2Wl กก A multivariate statistical technique, Q-mode factor analysis, was applied to
120 samples collected from five lacustrine soils of southwestern Ontario. In
each sample, 23 variables were measured: 11 chemical, and 12 particle size
classes. Three factors were found to account adequately for the variation in the
original data, i.e. 120 samples x 23 variables. The factors can be interpreted
as indicators of depositional and weathering environments. To simplify such an
interpretation and to try and separate the effects of the depositional
environment from the pedogenic processes, the chemical data was treated
separately from the grain size data. Two factors were found to describe
adequately the variation in chemical data and three factors accounted for the
variation in the grain size data. The chemical factors were interpreted to
represent the processes of weathering occurring in the soil profile. The grain
size factors were postulated as representing energy levels in the environment of
deposition of the parent materials, i.e. a low energy environment where the
sediments were formed predominantly through settling from suspension, a
relatively higher energy environment where a significant portion of the
sediments were deposited from traction currents, and an intermediate energy
level where both settling and traction were important processes. These
interpretations were arrived at considering only laboratory data and they agree
with morphological information obtained from the field. |
กก
|