[Terrapreta] Fwd: Early Terra Preta Production... and a Western Red Alder fantasy

Larry Williams lwilliams at nas.com
Tue Jan 8 17:04:34 CST 2008


Robert-------Thanks for reposting this information. After making  
charcoal with Richard Haard, I can say that it takes a lot of work to  
build and manage a firing and have wondered how we could afford to  
make a mound type firing with very high priced fuel or no fuel. I am  
into efficiency. Richard has followed the work of John Flottvik and  
has received a fine grade of charcoal as a result. With many thanks  
for John's support, free charcoal is not in the cards in the future.

I fully agree that transporting organics to a distant site makes no  
sense or should I say "cents". Currently, we plan to do another  
firing of wood in a few months for acquiring more charcoal and to see  
what we can learn about the products from a firing. It seem that we  
should consider doing a field burn in the late fall with corn stalks  
to learn of the difficulties of using stover material. I would assume  
that freshly dug damp clayey soil is essential in the process that  
you describe.

We live under some regulations concerning air quality and this may  
mean that the fall timing of a test may be a problem.

Have you made stover charcoal? It would seem that the stacked roots  
would need some mudding to better seal the firing chamber. I have  
wondered is there is a fire proof blanket that could be used instead  
of dirt if we tried a similar technic using small Western Red Alder  
trees as you used the roots of the corn plants. As I write this it  
comes to mind that I might be able to use a mixture of hay/ straw/  
grass and clay to provide sealed surface to contain the firing  
chamber. In local areas of high water tables young and old alder  
trees have a flat roots mass. I might be able to use a jute mesh or  
stuff the spaces between the roots with hay/ straw/ grass and clay to  
assist in holding the surface together because the Alder roots are  
not close knit. Using alder as the wood source would allow for a year  
round firing potential... a fun fantasy. As you may be able to tell I  
am writing as I work out the details.

With a stover kiln, how air tight do you think that it was? I have an  
idea that it was fairly well sealed?

I much appreciate your thoughts-------Larry



-----------------------------------
On Jan 8, 2008, at 1:03 PM, Robert Klein wrote:

> Hi All
>
>
>
>
> Early Terra Preta Production
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>
>       As
> my long time blog readers know, terra preta is a man made soil located
> in the Amazon by the Indians up to the time of the conquest for at
> least a thousand years. Besides the substantial 15% content of  
> powdered
> charcoal we have an additional persuasive content of apparent broken
> pottery shards throughout.
>
> The Indians were able to produce
> powdered charcoal while consuming a lot of low grade pottery in the
> process. This is many tons of charcoal per acre. The manufactured soil
> retains fertility without significant assistance in an environment  
> were
> its only competitor is low productivity slash and burn. High density
> settlement resulted and was almost certainly responsible for the
> legends of El Dorado. The Spaniards were about a generation too late
> and the knowledge was lost.]
>
> Reconstructing the production protocol was tricky but is is really  
> very simple.
>
> It
> was and still is impossible to use wood economically to produce the
> powdered charcoal. I say impossible because the direct costs of
> harvesting wood is well known and the cost of producing charcoal is
> also well known. That implies that wood charcoal which also has to be
> fine ground must have a cost base approaching that of sawn wood. The
> sunk cost is far too high to ever use as a soil additive. This is  
> borne
> out even in Africa were we see charcoal been made to take advantage of
> its direct cash value as fuel.
>
> That leaves us with dry crop
> residue as a source material and a very productive one to boot. In the
> time and place, and this is almost still true today, the only crop  
> that
> fitted the volume need to make the process practical is and was corn.
> Today bagasse could also be used. The important factor is tonnage per
> acre. Corn is good for ten tons per acre. Most other crops simply fail
> to produce enough plant material. Additionally, corn waste or stover
> must be removed and burned regardless.
>
> Since it must be gathered
> and burned in any event, the question is how to convert this feedstock
> into a ton or two of powdered charcoal or more reasonably into biochar
> retaining both the charcoal content and some remaining plant material.
>
> Here,
> the nature of the corn root itself helps out hugely. It form a flat
> disc, not unlike the base of a floor lamp. This dirt ball can be
> treated almost like a brick. It permits the building of tightly packed
> stacks whose outer wall is formed be tightly packed root discs loaded
> with mud. It is no big trick to build a vertical wall of these root
> discs to act as the outer shell of what is a temporary earthen  
> kiln. It
> was actually a brilliant innovation by some Indian a couple of
> thousands of years ago.
>
> This earthen kiln is then fired by the
> process of dumping a charge of glowing wood coals on the top of the
> stack, directly into the packed dry corn stalks, and covering it
> immediately with the sun dried earthen platter that carried the coals.
> You would then cover the top with additional dirt to maintain the
> integrity of the earthen kiln and let the coals do their work.
>
> The coals will drive a chimney
> into the stack and all the combustion will take place inside the
> covered chimney. This nicely minimizes any unnecessary energy loss and
> maximizes combustion which goes into reducing the balance of the
> stover. The earthen wall even filters out any errant heavy gases as
> they try to escape. I suspect that it is only with the recycled gas
> systems of today that we can do better.
>
> This task would be done
> after the corn had fully ripened and dehydrated which occurs just  
> after
> harvest. The corn stalks dry out then and are still pretty impervious
> to wetting by rain.
>
> Once the burn is complete the next day, one
> would rake out any unburned roots to throw into the next kiln and then
> take baskets of the soil - charcoal mixture back into the field to
> produce the hills for the next crop. The only tool used would be the
> earthen ware pottery and a strong back. Today I would use a metal  
> garbage can lid.
>
> This
> process produces enough material to salvage the field in tropical
> conditions for an immediate crop during the next season. Once this was
> understood, it became practice and was intensively employed long past
> its actual necessity for many thousands of acres in the Amazon.
>
> When
> I first made this hypothesis on the likely protocol, I did a  
> literature
> search of the Archeological data on the Terra Preta soils looking for
> the pollen data. Remember that corn is not your first choice of a crop
> plant on a rain forest soil. I was gratified to discover that the two
> principal crops were corn and cassava which also produces a lot of
> biomass but no usable root ball. This confirmed that the protocol had
> legs.
>
> I am quite prepared to work with someone who wishes to run
> field tests at no charge since I personally think that this will
> revolutionize all subsistence farming generally as they can be the
> first adopters. Larger acreages will need kiln equipment at the least
> and this will be capital intensive.
>
> And it would be great to get
> this going where the crop cycle is currently multiple years through
> slash and burn. I think particularly of the Philippines were I have  
> had
> fifteen year fallow periods reported. The same must be true for a lot
> of land in Africa and elsewhere. The more interesting question is the
> fertility increases in soils now been exploited.
>
>
> Arclein
>
> http://globalwarming-arclein.blogspot.com
>
>
>
>        
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