Primary red beds may be formed by the erosion and redeposition of red soils or older red beds, but a fundamental problem with this hypothesis is the relative scarcity of red-colored source sediments of suitable age close to an area of red-bed sediments in
Cheshire, England. Primary red beds may also form by in situ (early
diagenetic) reddening of the sediment by the dehydration of brown or drab colored ferric hydroxides. These ferric hydroxides commonly include
goethite (FeO-OH) and so-called "amorphous ferric hydroxide" or
limonite. Much of this material may be the mineral
ferrihydrite (Fe2O3 H2O). This dehydration or "aging" process has been found to be intimately associated with
pedogenesis in
alluvial floodplains and
desert environments.
Goethite (ferric hydroxide) is normally unstable relative to
hematite and, in the absence of water or at elevated temperature, will readily dehydrate according to the reaction: :2FeOOH (goethite) → Fe2O3 (hematite) +H2O The
Gibbs free energy (G) for the reaction goethite → hematite (at 250 °C) is −2.76 kJ/mol and G becomes increasingly negative with smaller particle size. Thus detrital ferric hydroxides, including goethite and ferrihydrite, will spontaneously transform into red-colored hematite pigment with time. This process not only accounts for the progressive reddening of alluvium but also the fact that older desert dune sands are more intensely reddened than their younger equivalents. == Diagenetic red beds ==