Soil primarily had its beginning
from rock together with animal and vegetable decay, if you can imagine long
stretches or periods of time when great rock masses were crumbling and breaking
up. Heat, water action, and friction were largely responsible for this. By
friction here is meant the rubbing and grinding of rock mass against rock mass.
Think of the huge rocks, a perfect chaos of them, bumping, scraping, settling
against one another. What would be the result? Well, I am sure you all could
work that out. This is what happened: bits of rock were worn off, a great deal
of heat was produced, pieces of rock were pressed together to form new rock
masses, some portions becoming dissolved in water. Why, I myself,
almost feel
the stress and strain of it all. Can you?
Then, too, there were great
changes in temperature. First everything was heated to a high temperature, then
gradually became cool. Just think of the cracking, the crumbling, the
upheavals, that such changes must have caused! You know some of the effects in
winter of sudden freezes and thaws. But the little examples of bursting water
pipes and broken pitchers are as nothing to what was happening in the world
during those days. The water and the gases in the atmosphere helped along this
crumbling work.
From all this action of rubbing,
which action we call mechanical, it is easy enough to understand how sand was
formed. This represents one of the great divisions of soil sandy soil. The sea
shores are great masses of pure sand. If soil were nothing but broken rock
masses then indeed it would be very poor and unproductive. But the early forms
of animal and vegetable life decaying became a part of the rock mass and a
better soil resulted. So the soils we speak of as sandy soils have mixed with
the sand other matter, sometimes clay, sometimes vegetable matter or humus, and
often animal waste.
Clay brings us right to another
class of soils clayey soils. It happens that certain portions of rock masses
became dissolved when water trickled over them and heat was plenty and
abundant. This dissolution took place largely because there is in the air a
certain gas called carbon dioxide or carbonic acid gas. This gas attacks and
changes certain substances in rocks. Sometimes you see great rocks with
portions sticking up looking as if they had been eaten away. Carbonic acid did
this. It changed this eaten part into something else which we call clay. A
change like this is not mechanical but chemical. The difference in the two
kinds of change is just this: in the one case of sand, where a mechanical
change went on, you still have just what you started with, save that the size
of the mass is smaller. You started with a big rock, and ended with little
particles of sand. But you had no different kind of rock in the end. Mechanical
action might be illustrated with a piece of lump sugar. Let the sugar represent
a big mass of rock. Break up the sugar, and even the smallest bit is sugar. It
is just so with the rock mass; but in the case of a chemical change you start
with one thing and end with another. You started with a big mass of rock which
had in it a portion that became changed by the acid acting on it. It ended in
being an entirely different thing which we call clay. So in the case of
chemical change a certain something is started with and in the end we have an
entirely different thing. The clay soils are often called mud soils because of
the amount of water used in their formation.
The third sort of soil which we
farm people have to deal with is lime soil. Remember we are thinking of soils
from the farm point of view. This soil of course ordinarily was formed from
limestone. Just as soon as one thing is mentioned about which we know nothing,
another comes up of which we are just as ignorant. And so a whole chain of questions
follows. Now you are probably saying within yourselves, how was limestone first
formed?
At one time ages ago the lower
animal and plant forms picked from the water particles of lime. With the lime
they formed skeletons or houses about themselves as protection from larger
animals. Coral is representative of this class of skeleton-forming animal.
As the animal died the skeleton
remained. Great masses of this living matter pressed all together, after ages,
formed limestone. Some limestones are still in such shape that the shelly
formation is still visible. Marble, another limestone, is somewhat crystalline
in character. Another well-known limestone is chalk. Perhaps you'd like to know
a way of always being able to tell limestone. Drop a little of this acid on
some lime. See how it bubbles and fizzles. Then drop some on this chalk and on
the marble, too. The same bubbling takes place. So lime must be in these three
structures. One does not have to buy a special acid for this work, for even the
household acids like vinegar will cause the same result.
Then these are the three types of
soil with which the farmer has to deal, and which we wish to understand. For
one may learn to know his garden soil by studying it, just as one learns a
lesson by study.
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