Summary. The dynamics of the forest to the north of Manaus is tightly linked to that of the soil. The latosol that covers the plateau, which supports a dense forest, consists from top to bottom of: (a) a brown, clayey organic horizon (0.3 m), (b) a yellow horizon, very rich in clay but permeable (from 0.3 to 4 m), (c) a nodular horizon rich in A1 and Fe oxides (from 4 to 9 m), and (d) a horizon which still preserves the sedimentary structures of the parent sandstone, where quartz is intensely dissolved and kaolinite crystallizes in pores. In perfectly flat areas, the clay of the organic horizon is destroyed by aeidocomplexolysis, and the dissolved A1 is transported vertically by the drainage water. A part of this A1 is used to make the gibbsite nodules of horizon (c), and the rest is used to make kaolinite in horizon (d). Because aluminum is thus conserved within any vertical prism, the rate of destruction of horizon (a) is equivalent to the rate of advance of the kaolinization zone into the sediment: the latosol is said to be in equilibrium, the surface remains perfectly flat as it slowly sinks, the quantity of kaolinite increases with time, and the silica released by quartz dissolution in the whole profile is exported by drainage water to the water table. In contrast, near drainage axes, however small initially, the drainage becomes inclined toward the axis. Part of the A1 released by acidocomplexolysis of horizon (a) is now exported to rivers, and A1 is no longer conserved within any given prism. The rate of advance of the kaolinization zone (d) into the sediment now becomes less than the rate of destruction of horizon (a) and the surface sinks faster than that of the surrounding plateau. After this differential 'podzolization' has gone on long enough, it creates a network of 'geochemical valleys' characterized by convex slopes and bounded by sandy soils (campinas). The vegetation becomes sparser and sparser. At the end, only some bushes and lichens survive on the white sand. Key words. Rain forest; sediment; latosol; podzol; geochemical land morphogenesis; dynamic equilibrium and disequilibrium; aluminium; silica.The region to the north of the Amazon, between the rivers Rio Negro and Trombetas ( fig. 1) is covered by a dense, humid, evergreen rain forest that has developed on yellow, clayey latosols. The soils cover plateaux of the tertiary continental 'Barreiras' sediments. These plateaux are more or less strongly dissected by the hydrographic system (Planalto dissecado, Rio Trombetas, Rio Negro) ~. The experimental station for forestry of the Instituto Nacional de Pesquisas da Amaz6nia, where this study was carried out, is about 60 km north of Manaus (see fig. 1) and is representative of the region. These soils have as parental material the products of the weathering of the sediments (Barreiras formations), which involves intense dissolution of quartz, concentration of aluminum hydroxide, and crystallization of kaolinite in dissolution voids 9. It turns out that these sediments, and even more their alterati...