Acid sulphate soil in Falkenberg on the west coast of Sweden - The first discovery of active acid sulphate soil outside the Baltic Basin
Abstract
Active AS soil has several negative impacts on the environment due to their ability to severely decrease
pH-values and mobilize metals bound in the soil. The negative impacts can especially be seen in aquatic
environments that drains an active AS soil. Active AS soil creates difficulties to reach the environmental
goals that were set by the Swedish Parliament in 1999. Investigations of the distribution of AS soil in
Sweden have chiefly been done along the northern coast, Västerbotten, and Norrbotten, but discoveries
have also been done in Mälardalen and Skåne. During a construction work in Falkenberg 2019, water pumps
corroded and the presence of yellowish drainage water with low pH-values and high sulphate concentrations
led to the conclusion that AS soil exists in the area. The focus of this project was to determine the
distribution and existence of AS soil in Falkenberg, on the west coast of Sweden, to shed light on their
formational environment, and to evaluate the suitability of ERT methods as an identification tool for these
soils on the Swedish west coast. The project was carried out from September 2019 to June 2020 as a master
thesis at the University of Gothenburg in collaboration with SGU. Soil sampling was done during the
autumn of 2019 with an extendible Edelman auger. Soil sampling was carried out in areas where earlier
soil-type mapping showed occurrence of organic-rich sediments. The soil samples were collected for
oxidation and further laboratory analyses, including metal and S analyses at an accredited laboratory. After
the oxidation of the soil samples, it was concluded that both active and potential AS soil exists in
Falkenberg. Four sites were classified as active AS soil sites and one was classified as a potential AS soil
site. This is the first discovered active AS soil outside of the Baltic Basin in Sweden. All the observations
of AS soil sites were done below 13 m.a.s.l., in clay gyttja, gyttja clay, and sand. When the location of these
sites was established, ERT measurements were done at one of the sites, H19001, during November 2019
and February 2020. The results showed that differentiation of the AS soil from surrounding sediments was
possible at this site. The formation of the AS soil on the west coast of Sweden differs from that along the
Swedish north coast and is thought to have taken place in shallow protected lagoons and bays during Tapes
transgression.
Degree
Student essay
Collections
View/ Open
Date
2020-09-09Author
Kling Jonasson, Ida
Keywords
Acid sulphate soil on the Swedish west coast
formational environment
Tapes transgression
Resistivity measurements
Baltic Basin
Series/Report no.
B
1113
Language
eng