Create an Account
username: password:
 
  MemeStreams Logo

Phaethon's MemeStream

search

Phaethon
My Blog
My Profile
My Audience
My Sources
Send Me a Message

sponsored links

Phaethon's topics
Arts
Business
Games
Health and Wellness
(Home and Garden)
Miscellaneous
Current Events
Recreation
Local Information
Science
Society
Sports
Technology

support us

Get MemeStreams Stuff!


 
Current Topic: Home and Garden

t r u t h o u t | Kelpie Wilson | Birth of a New Wedge
Topic: Home and Garden 9:45 pm EDT, Aug 16, 2008

Article on the stunning environmental benefits of agrichar.

The exceptional properties of charcoal in soil were first noticed in the Amazon where there are large areas of what is called "terra preta" or Amazonian dark earths. These dark earths can be several feet deep and contain up to nine percent carbon, as compared with nearby soils that have only about half of one percent. In one of the most fascinating aspects of this story, the terra preta soils turn out to have been deliberately created by a lost Amazonian civilization. Some of the areas have been dated going back to more than 7,000 years, and they are still highly fertile.

Field trials and experiments in pots show impressive yield gains in charcoal-amended soils, but so far researchers don't completely understand why. One question is whether the effect is primarily chemical and physical or primarily biological. Charcoal is a highly porous material that is very good at holding nutrients like nitrogen and phosphorus and making them available to plant roots. It also aerates soil and helps it retain water.

t r u t h o u t | Kelpie Wilson | Birth of a New Wedge


Soils Offer New Hope As Carbon Sink
Topic: Home and Garden 9:38 pm EDT, Aug 16, 2008

Plenty of good stuff on YouTube searching "agrichar" and "biochar."

The huge potential of agricultural soils to reduce greenhouse gases and increase production at the same time has been reinforced by new research findings at NSW Department of Primary Industries’ (DPI) Wollongbar Agricultural Institute in Australia.

Trials of agrichar - a product hailed as a saviour of Australia’s carbon-depleted soils and the environment - have doubled and, in one case, tripled crop growth when applied at the rate of 10 tonnes per hectare.

Soils Offer New Hope As Carbon Sink


 
 
Powered By Industrial Memetics
RSS2.0