Thursday, January 05, 2006

 

This Day in the History of Science

On this day in 1794, was born Edward Ruffin the father of soil chemistry in the U.S., who showed how to restore fertility to depleted soil. Though without formal science education, Ruffin determined that the soil of southeast plantations that had been overused with single-crop production had become more acidic and unable to benefit from fertilizers. The remedy he published (1818) was the spreading of marl to neutralize the acidity. He went further by specifying effective methods of fertilizing, plowing and rotating crops to increase production of grains. He expanded his recommendations in book and journal article form, as well lecturing up to the 1850's. He then became an outspoken secessionist, and took his own life upon the South losing in the Civil War, at least when he learned of it on June 18, 1865.

(h/t) Today in Science History

Comments:
Another wikipedia article to add to my to-do list!
Thanks.
Wikipedia User: Paleorthid
my blog: transectpoints.blogspot.com
 
Post a Comment

<< Home

This page is powered by Blogger. Isn't yours?