ShmoopTube

Where Monty Python meets your 10th grade teacher.

Search Thousands of Shmoop Videos

History of Technology 3: Fertile Soil 10 Views


Share It!


Description:

How do you get fertile soil? You wait until it ovulates. ...Yeah, we'll see ourselves out.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:02

For human purposes not all dirt is good dirt, call us high maintenance, [Piles of dirt with bad, decent and OK signs in them]

00:07

call us needy or just say we have way high standards we humans want our dirt to [Man examines a pile of dirt and celebrates with a fantastic sign]

00:12

be fertile which means it has to have the right combination of things to grow [Man on a motorbike covers man with sign in mud]

00:15

awesome crops. Well fertile soil has to have the right

00:18

nutrients like nitrogen and potassium it also can't be too salty or too acidic [Scientist eats the dirt and spits it out because it is too salty]

00:24

and it has to have good structure so that roots can move around and pick up [Plant grows]

00:28

water finally it needs the right critters and good bacteria, you know kinda [Bacteria underground]

00:33

like a probiotic yogurt though eating any kind of dirt isn't necessarily a good

00:37

option for those in search of probiotics. Well farming the same soil over and over [Tractor driving over soil]

00:42

again depletes it of nutrients and plant food farm a place too hard and it will

00:46

turn to dust don't believe us ask all the folks who lived through the Dust Bowl [People appear out of a dust cloud]

00:51

in the 1930s or don't they're still pretty cranky about that of all the

00:56

factors that affect fertile soil nitrogen is one of the biggest without

01:00

nitrogen plants can't do their plant magic and turn sunshine into food or [Nitrogen atom saying it is one of a kind]

01:04

pull minerals and nutrients out of the dirt so let's figure out where our

01:08

favorite little chemical comes from turns out there's a thing called the

01:12

nitrogen cycle. It's not a motorcycle made of nitrogen though wouldn't that be cool so [Nitrogen atom riding a motorbike in a classroom]

01:18

where does the nitrogen cycle start well nowhere in particular it's a cycle [Hamsters on wheels]

01:22

so there's no beginning and no end and yeah we know deep... Alright we'll start

01:26

talking about poop. Yep the waste of animals and plants decomposes which puts

01:31

Nitrogen into the soil. This is why farmers sometimes intentionally fill

01:36

their fields with manure shockingly enough they don't just enjoy the smell [Farmer shoveling manure into a field]

01:40

Next friendly neighborhood bacteria in the soil converts the plant and animal

01:45

poop into the kind of nitrogen that plants can use plants then binge on the [Bacteria smiling]

01:50

nitrogen in the soil and grow like weeds or like you know whatever kind of plant

01:54

they are. After that people in animals mercilessly eat the plants we're [Strawberry plants growing]

01:59

like vampires. We can't help how we have to feed well [Humans and a monkey run by and destroy the plants]

02:02

after the feeding frenzy animal and plant residues return nitrogen to the

02:06

soil again and the cycle is complete. Well nitrogen from the atmosphere [Rain lands on the soil]

02:10

gets into the soil via rain then atmospheric nitrogen can be

02:15

converted into plant friendly nitrogen by legumes. And no legumes is not

02:21

the French word for various types of bubblegum. Legumes are plants like [Woman in a sweet shop]

02:25

alfalfa, clovers and soybeans. Well now that we've got science we can see how

02:31

nitrogen matters to history. Every new piece of agricultural technology helped [Farmers next a nitrogen atom statue]

02:36

us grow crops or raise critters at least a bit more efficiently. But as a whole

02:41

they haven't always benefitted the nitrogen cycle. Plenty of Agriculture's [Poster of the nitrogen cycle falls to the ground]

02:45

history has been about finding new sources of nitrogen and moving nitrogen

02:50

around in places we need it most there was literally a war over guano aka bat [Men in suits and sunglasses exchange a briefcase and money]

02:56

poop, because guano is so nitrogen rich you know what they say one bat's poop is

03:01

another man's treasure...

Up Next

GED Social Studies 1.1 Civics and Government
39794 Views

GED Social Studies 1.1 Civics and Government

Related Videos

Fake News
11938 Views

How do you tell fake news from real news?

Jane Eyre Summary
123033 Views

When you're about to marry the love of your life, not many things could stop you. However, finding out that your future hubby is keeping his crazy...

What is Shmoop?
91412 Views

Here at Shmoop, we work for kids, not just the bottom line. Founded by David Siminoff and his wife Ellen Siminoff, Shmoop was originally conceived...

ACT Math 4.5 Elementary Algebra
492 Views

ACT Math: Elementary Algebra Drill 4, Problem 5. What is the solution to the problem shown?