[Terrapreta] Terrapreta Digest, Vol 15, Issue 14

Greg and April gregandapril at earthlink.net
Mon Apr 7 11:22:41 CDT 2008


I think we do need to understand the origins of Terra Preta - at least in part to understand the mechanics of how it has become self sustaining, and wither or not the science behind it would be useful in other places.

What clues can we find?    Other than pottery shards and the physical / structural makeup of the char,  there is not much else that I know of due to the nature of the area.

You are correct, that studying the nature of the mined TP might give a few more clues.


Why is it self sustaining?    Personally I think that it's a matter of achieving a given nutrient density and CEC level after which the density of the plant life is able to keep it going.    

What I would like to know is it able to spread or is it just confined to the areas of human influence.


Greg H.
 
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Sean K. Barry 
  To: 'Nikolaus Foidl' ; terrapreta at bioenergylists.org ; MFH 
  Sent: Monday, April 07, 2008 0:40
  Subject: Re: [Terrapreta] Terrapreta Digest, Vol 15, Issue 14


  Dear All,

  Is understanding the true origins of Terra Preta de Indio absolutely necessary in order to form Terra Preta Nova?

  If we examine known sites containing Terra Preta now, what clues can we take from the sites as to what is there that is working and then how can we export that effect to other sites.  What happens to TP soil that is mined and sold to be put onto another site or in pots?  Does that soil retain or grow its properties on the new site?

  I don't think finding the root mechanism for the buildup of Terra Preta formations 4500 years ago is really necessary to do this.

  Regards,

  SKB
    ----- Original Message ----- 
    From: MFH 
    To: 'Nikolaus Foidl' ; terrapreta at bioenergylists.org 
    Sent: Sunday, April 06, 2008 8:44 PM
    Subject: Re: [Terrapreta] Terrapreta Digest, Vol 15, Issue 14


    Well said Nikolaus.

    I've lived in Papua New Guinea for 40 years and understand your reasoning.
    To the surprise of many, 'formal' agriculture can be traced back at least
    8000 years in the Wahgi Valley of PNG.

    I tend to favour the argument that the TP soils are not the result of
    deliberate and planned char production and distribution. 

    Max Henderson

    -----Original Message-----
    From: terrapreta-bounces at bioenergylists.org
    [mailto:terrapreta-bounces at bioenergylists.org] On Behalf Of Nikolaus Foidl
    Sent: Monday, 7 April 2008 11:33 AM
    To: terrapreta at bioenergylists.org
    Subject: Re: [Terrapreta] Terrapreta Digest, Vol 15, Issue 14


    Dear All¨

    I live in Bolivia on a farm and next to our farm are several small
    indigenous villages or house gatherings where the original people still live
    as they did hundreds of years ago. They have, as we have a certain need to
    clean the houses from trash and the main place and the surroundings of the
    houses. Everything starting with rests of fruits and gardening as well rests
    of food and cooking is thrown into a pit in the backyard. Nowadays some have
    chicken and pigs so part of those thrown away organic materials are still
    taken as food from those animals what did not happen before the Spanish
    arrived because they had no chicken and pigs before. The fires which burn
    all day and long into the night to spook the mosquitoes away produce huge
    amounts of badly burned rests and ashes. The simple pottery they use are a
    short life pottery, they fall down, the dogs or pigs or children brake it,
    the pottery is not very heat resistant so brake easily when put into fire
    with something cooking in it etc. so there is a good amount of broken
    pottery a day in the village which as well is thrown into the trash pit in
    the backyard. The defecation as well is done next to the pit and thrown into
    it, to clean their ass, leaves and corncobs are the most used items which as
    well end up in the pit. So if you have a closer look at the content of the
    pit then you see that's an accumulation of a lot of minerals like potassium,
    phosphorus, nitrogen, magnesium ,calcium etc. If you do a mass balance over
    100 years or more its a simple mineral dump because with all that rain the
    organics after 3 to 6 weeks are all eaten up by bacteria and fungi and what
    is left is slower degrading bones from animals, lignin and some cellulose.
    After 500 years in such high water and high temperature environments even
    the bones and lignin etc . Are irecognizeable mineralized .
    So there is no meaningful wise man or ethnic which studied how to rise the
    fertility of the soils , no complicated thinking about cationic exchange
    capacity or nitrogen influence in crop production etc. it is as simple as it
    can get it is a series of dumpsters with over time interconnected. Those
    people had and still have several village like compounds which they visit
    regularly what means when the population of eat able animals is down due to
    over hunting they simply move on some kilometers and stay in the next place
    one or two seasons and after several years they come back to always the same
    places and erect again some very primitive housings and the cycle starts
    over again.
    You have to have in mind that under these conditions where you spend 95% of
    your time for surviving and where everybody has the same workload just to
    survive there is not much room for experiments and development. That's the
    reason why they are still 5000 years back in there social and human
    developement.Untill they develope a social network with different functions
    for different social groups in the village they wont have people freed from
    the dally workload of surviving so they can dedicate time for development of
    the same group.
    If somebody will have a look at our dumpsters in some 2000 years from now
    the same esoteric discussion about the deeper meaning of accumulating things
    in the dumpster will happen. What do you think why did the accumulate flat
    glass peaces and half round glass peaces so evenly distributed in the
    surrounding soil? Is it possible that they had a growing system where they
    avoided humidity loss from the soil covering the soil around the plants with
    different types of glasses, did they filter out different damaging light
    waves with different colors? And reality is : its a dumpster where we throw
    our waste in without thinking very much about the consequences.

    That's it , don't interpret things in terra preta which never where there,
    its a dumpster.

    Best regards Nikolaus





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