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Soil
Remineralization in Context
Soil Remineralization (SR)
creates fertile soils by returning the minerals
to the soil much the same way the Earth does:
during an Ice Age, glaciers crush rock onto the
Earth's soil mantle, winds blow the dust in the
form of loess all over the globe. Volcanoes
erupt spewing forth minerals from deep within
the Earth, and minerals are contained in
alluvial deposits.
Within silicate rocks are a
broad spectrum of up to 100 minerals and trace
elements necessary for the well being of all
life and the creation of fertile soils. Glacial
moraine or mixtures of single rock types applied
to soils create a sustainable and superior
alternative to the use of ultimately harmful
chemical fertilizers, pesticides and herbicides.
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One of many anecdotal photos sent over the years to the magazine in the early remineralization movement in the 1980s. These two oak leaves were sent by Jeannie Stevens from Victoria Australia. The larger leaf was that of an oak tree that was remineralized in March 1984. At that time the leaf was the same size as the smaller one on the left. There was a magnificent forest of seedlings under that tree in December 1986. The oak tree nearby with the smaller leaf on the left was not given an application of rock dust and had very few viable acorns and weak seedlings.
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SR has been shown in
scientific studies to increase yields as much as
two to four times for agriculture and forestry
(wood volume), and to have immediate results and
long term effects with a single application.
Hundreds of thousands of
tons of appropriate rock dust for soil and
forest regeneration are stockpiled by the gravel
and stone industry.
A Brief History
Remineralization has
mainly been researched and explored by three
distinct groups:
- First, German
nutritional biochemist, Julius Hensel,
pioneered SR in the 1880s with his book
Bread from Stones and a modest agricultural
movement came into being. Following his
contribution, many scientists have done
research on SR since the late 1930s in
Germany and Central Europe for agriculture
and forests.
More recent researchers include Peter von
Fragstein at the University of Kessel,
Germany, who has researched remineralization
as a slow-release fertilizer with many
different rock types and to deter insects.
The technology was not available at the turn
of the century to produce finely ground rock
dust, so SR, as promoted by Hensel, could
not be produced feasibly on a large scale.
SR was revived about thirty years ago in
Europe. Many rock dust products for
agriculture, forestry and sewage sludge
treatment have been created in Germany,
Austria and Switzerland in the last few
decades and have been successfully marketed
by the natural stone industry. Companies
such as Lava-Union (Germany), Sanvita
(Austria) and Bernasconi (formerly known as
Zimmerli, Switzerland), along with many
others and the Natural Stone Industry (Die
Naturstein Industrie) based in Bonn, Germany
have also done a great deal of research.
- Second, is the more
recently developed field of agrogeology.
This research has been carried out mainly in
Canada, Brazil, Tanzania, the Canary
Islands, and West Africa--especially on
laterite soils. Because of the intense
tropical rainfall, NPK fertilizers are
washed out in only a few weeks and cannot be
stored by the soils, and are especially
harmful to the groundwater. Rock fertilizers
not only give nutrients over longer periods
to cultivated plants, but also improve the
ion-exchange-capacity of soils by forming
new clay minerals during the weathering of
the fertilizer. Researchers include William
Fyfe and Ward Chesworth, among others.
For current information about agrogeology, see Rocks for Crops. The book Rocks for Crops by Peter van Straaten from the University of Guelph can be found online here.
- Third, the grass
roots movement concerned with the premise of
John Hamaker in the book The Survival of
Civilization, co-authored with Don Weaver,
asserts that SR is not only the key to
restoring soils and forests, but in the
larger context, absolutely necessary and
urgent to reduce levels of carbon dioxide in
the atmosphere and stabilize the climate.
Especially recommended are rock gravels and
glacial moraine from glacial deposits which
provide the most natural mixtures of rocks
with the broadest possible spectrum of
minerals and trace elements.
This movement began with Hamaker's writing
in the early 1970s and expanded in the 1980s
into a global grassroots community
consisting of ecologically concerned
individuals and organizations, farmers and
gardeners, scientists and policy makers.
To facilitate networking
and the flow of information and promote SR as
advocated by John Hamaker and Don Weaver,
Soil Remineralization, A Network
Newsletter, began in 1986 and became the
Remineralize the Earth
magazine in 1991. The
magazine has networked to people all over the
world, collected research and a wealth of
anecdotal results of farmers and gardeners to
substantiate the results of SR. In October 1995,
Remineralize the Earth, Towards a Sustainable
Agriculture, Forestry and Climate, was
incorporated as a non-profit organization.
On May 24, 1994, the U.S.
Department of Agriculture (USDA) (Beltsville,
MD), the U.S. Bureau of Mines (USBM)
(Washington, DC), the National Stone Association
(NSA) (Washington, DC), and the National
Aggregates Association (NAA) (Silver Spring, MD)
co-sponsored a forum on "Soil Remineralization
and Sustainable Agriculture" at the USDA
Agricultural Research Station in Beltsville, MD.
The Forum brought together
the by-product rock fines generating industry
and the proponents of SR to explore
environmentally-sound uses of rock fines and to
identify the state of the science supporting
their use and the gaps in knowledge that need to
be filled.
The USDA began a series of
demonstration trials with rock fines (from
Georgia, Maryland and New York) and other
industrial by-products. Dr. Ronald Korcak,
research leader of the fruit lab, directed the
trials over a three-year period. They are also
beginning to research the use of rock dust in
compost under the direction of Dr. Larry Sikora.
The now defunct U.S. Bureau of Mines designed a
prototype for a GIS (Geographic Information
Systems) database to target soils in most need
of SR and their distance from regional sources
of rock fines to calculate transport costs and
marketability of specific rock fines. The
National Aggregate Association has a Task Force
on Remineralization exploring the possibilities
for creating sustainable products for
agriculture, forestry and other uses. Research
projects are currently underway at universities
and as part of research and development programs
of some of the largest aggregate companies in
the US, Europe and Australia and through
organizations such as Men of the Trees in
Australia.
Just a paradigm shift away
from conventional chemical NPK farming is a vast
new frontier, SR - key to the sustainable
agriculture of tomorrow. The agenda for SR is
clear. It will create abundance in an era of
diminishing resources and shift us away from
fossil fuels. Remineralization is nature's way
to regenerate soils. We can return the Earth to
earlier interglacial Eden-like conditions
through appropriate technology.
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