“…Warm, arid and semiarid soils include secondary minerals comprising crystalline Fe-oxyhydroxides and phyllosilicates that grade from dioctahedral smectite to mixed-layer smectite-kaolin and kaolinite or dehydrated/hydrated halloysite with increasing annual rainfall (Singer, 1966;Graham and Francovizcaino, 1992;Righi et al, 1999;Dekayir and El-Maataoui, 2002;Singer et al, 2004;Mirabella et al, 2005;Abayneh et al, 2006;Barbera et al, 2008;Egli et al, 2008). Warm, wet temperate and tropical soils generally exhibit secondary mineral fractions dominated by halloysite, hydroxy-Al interlayered smectite, gibbsite and crystalline Fe-oxyhydroxides because of high rates of desilication and generally moist soil conditions that favor hydrated kaolin phases (Kautz and Ryan, 2003;Van der Weijden and Pacheco, 2003;Ndayiragije and Delvaux, 2004;Kleber et al, 2007;Zhang et al, 2007). In contrast, cool pedogenic environments exhibit secondary minerals dominated by SRO phases that include allophanic materials, ferrihydrite, and organo-metal complexes (Shoji et al, 1993;Chadwick et al, 2003;Pokrovsky et al, 2005).…”