Published April 5, 2024 | Version v1
Dataset Open

Fourier transformed infrared reflectance (FTIR) spectra of peat soils collected from the top and bottom of peatland erosion gullies

  • 1. ROR icon James Hutton Institute

Description

Peat soil was randomly  collected  from gullies within two eroding blanket bogs. Balmoral (BAM) is on a large high-altitude plateau blanket bog in the eastern part of the Cairngorms National Park, Scotland, UK (56.93° N, − 3.16° E, 642 m asl) and Glensaugh (GSA) is an upland livestock farm  with sections of and blanket bog peatland in the Grampian foothills (56.55° N, 2.33° E, 412 m asl). Both sites have undergone extensive degradation and peat erosion, and both have, in some parts, recently undergone restoration practices, including bunding and reprofiling.

Peat samples were collected at Glensaugh and Balmoral as follows. At Glensaugh, peat at the top 1 cm of exposed gully sides (approximately 10-20cm from the vegetated surface) and at the gully bottom were taken, air dried and passed on for FTIR analysis. These gullies correspond to four erosion pin measurement areas and their corresponding peat sediment trap areas at Glensaugh. At Balmoral, the same approach was taken except six ‘gully top’ and ‘gully bottom’ sites were randomly selected and not geographically paired in the same way at Glensaugh.

Samples were air dried and finely ball milled, prior to FTIR analysis. FTIR spectra were recorded using a Bruker Vertex 70 FTIR spectrometer (Bruker, Ettlingen, Germany) and OPUS 7.2 software. To record the FTIR spectra, each of the samples were placed, in turn, on a Diamond Attenuated Total Reflectance (DATR) sampling accessory, with a single reflectance system. Data points in the range of 4000-400 cm-1 were recorded with a resolution of 4 cm-1 and average of 64 scans. A spectrum of the empty sampling accessory, with the same resolution and number of scans, was recorded as the background spectrum before each measurement. 

Since the penetration depth for the DATR accessory is different for each wavelength and is directly proportional to the wavelength of the incident light (The higher the wavenumber the lower the penetration), an ATR correction was applied to the spectra to correct this effect, using the OPUS software. No correction was required for water vapour and CO2 as the spectrometer is continuously purged with dry air.

 

In the dataset, columns correspond to the following:

Site: Balmoral or Glensaugh

Gully Position: Top or bottom

Gully Number: Replicate gullies within the site

Sample date: Date

Sample ID: Unique identifier

Remaining columns: Reflectance at a given wavelength

Files

Balmoral and Glensaugh gully top and bottom FTIR.csv

Files (388.2 kB)