Clastic Dikes and the Sendai Earthquake

The Landslide Blog posted on a fascinating video of muddy water pushed out of soil fissures during the Sendai earthquake. What you are seeing in the video is likely how our Inland NW clastic dikes were formed.

In the Inland Northwest USA we have extensive slackwater sediments left by multiple glacial flood events. Most are in Washington State (see map of Lake Lewis). In some places, they are shot full of clastic dikes, a concern because they might provide a preferential pathway for contaminants reaching groundwater.

Short circuiting of contaminants down dike structures is enough of a concern that Washington Department of Ecology has us assess clastic dike presence during siting studies of industrial wastewater sprayfields (see WDOE-9336, page 12).

An actual occurrence of this type of pollutant short circuiting is yet to be documented, but that doesn’t keep clastic dikes from being one of the more fascinating features of Washington soils and geology.

Uncategorized

Spokane Needs the New Soil Science

This morning, a draft white paper, Securing a Future for Soil Science, was distributed for comment to the division heads of the Soil Science Society of America. It is breathtakingly refreshing. And it encourages soil science geared to environmental protection and restoration, the aspect of soil science that Spokane needs the most.

The white paper covers many aspects of the state of soil science, much of it out of concern for the continuing erosion of soil science teaching capacity. A trend that has been going on for decades, soil science departments are being disassembled with the applied bits of soil science assimilated into the various disciplines that rely on them the most. Soil science research is increasingly performed by other than formally trained soil scientists. Old story, we’re dealing with it. Immediately new and exciting in this paper is that it makes an unprecedented appeal for soil science educators to embrace, and teach, the unique biological and ecological facets of soil science. And in doing so, concisely outlines the aspects of soil science that Spokane and the Inland Northwest will be increasingly looking to in order to restore water quality and revitalize our dynamic economies: transportation, agricultural, forestry, mining, industrial, and urban.

Redefining our disciplinary context and core activities
The evolving and broader context of soil science is derived from the array of functions and critical services provided by soils that both include and transcend food production:

  • Soil is the most biologically active compartment of the biosphere, hosting the largest pool of biodiversity of all biospheres;
  • Soil is the planet’s life support system, functioning as Earths’ life support body, a thin film of life covering much of the terrestrial surface;
  • Soil is a giant recycling system, providing most of our needs for food, feed, fiber, and increasingly energy production through biofuels.
  • Soil supports global biogeochemical cycles (C, N, P), representing the largest terrestrial stock of organic carbon;
  • Soil provides important ecosystem services (e.g., provisions of fresh and clean water) essential for human primary needs including drinking water and food provision, and carbon storage and flood regulation;
  • Soil is a functioning complex natural body with unique characteristics and emergent behaviors that cannot be deduced from a collection of its constituents or individual processes; soil is an integrator of the earth processes for which it is intrinsically linked.

All these things have been said before, often as not by folks outside traditional soil science circles. The nation’s premier body of soil science professionals has taken this to heart, and in fact, has been working quietly (and not so quietly) along these lines for many years. It is good to see that others within the profession are getting the message, and getting the message out.

retooled 12/15/2011

Restoration

Lands Council’s First Friday Open House

Lands Council‘s First Friday Open House
February 4, 2011 from 5pm to 7pm – 25 W. Main Ste 222
Join The Lands Council Crew as we enjoy gourmet food, delicious chocolates, wine & beer, a little pampering and amazing artwork by outdoor photographer, Randy Beacham!
Learn more about The Lands Council, our current projects & what we will be working toward in 2011. We look forward to spending time with all our guests, whether current members, those looking to get involved or guest of guests! So don’t forget, bring a friend! See you on the 4th.

via LaunchPadINW

Events

Biochar Standards

In a very positive development for biochar stakeholders, a Biochar Characterization Standard Working Group is being convened by the International Biochar Initiative.

The goal of this working group is to determine definitively “what is biochar?” For years, many have wondered how biochar differs from traditional charcoal. The answer is highly technical. In addition, there are myriad ways to produce biochar, all resulting in different properties and effects in soil. With a firm, thoughtful standard in place, biochar producers and end-users will have definitive guidelines on how to produce and/or purchase the highest quality char for a desired effect.

All of us working with biochar recognize this as a critically important issue.  One is left to wonder how much more effective recent federal research would have been if it had included a robust characterization of the biochar stock provided by the fast pyrolysis industries.

That research often does a poor job in controlling for the liming effect of the biochar.  How much of a boost to productivity would you get with just the liming effect absent the charcoal?  This clearly matters and, as I have shared with some of the Working Group members, I would like to see acid neutralizing potential or ANP ( in units of calcium carbonate equiv or CCE) be at least considered as a labeling requirement. Other aspects are more critical, but even a coarse rating of low-med-high ANP would be very useful. Acid neutralizing potential is usually low in biochar, between 1 and 2% CCE. On the other hand, some biochar stocks can have substantial ANP above 20% and as a consequence could alter forested soil ecology in unintended ways. Out here in the inland Western US and Canada, our soils are less acidic than in the East, thus the same ANP application basis that will have no discernible effect on soil pH in the East, could move our soils from pH 7 to 8. That concern is what keeps Avista’s Kettle Falls mill-waste-to-energy, high carbon, ash going into a private landfill rather than beneficially reused on our forests here, whereas ash application is accepted practice in the Eastern states. Personally, I think the Kettle Falls material could, and should, be land applied. Its just a matter of finding the appropriate site conditions.

[post expanded 2/3/11 10:21 PM]

Uncategorized

Chicago: Biochar and Urban Soils

The idea of using biochar to enhance urban soils came on strong last week at the Sustainable Sites Symposium in Chicago. The quality of a landscape depends largely on the quality of its soils. Root invigoration research indicates a tree given a more productive enviroment doesn’t need as many roots to thrive. This can have huge implications for urban forestry. Biochar can help support a larger and more vigorous urban canopy. However biochar effects are complex, affected by source, pyrolysis process, and site dynamics.  There is little research to support urban use of biochar, but the value of potential soil health improvements assures eventual study. Symposium attendee Christine Esposito reports that the City of Chicago is receptive to making sites available to study biochar in urban soils. I am thinking Lopa Brunjes could use this story to good effect in her February biochar presentation to TED.

Restoration

Workshop: Streambank Soil Bioengineering. March 9-10, 2011

Streambank Soil Bioengineering: How to Build and Install Vegetative Structures for Reducing Streambank Erosion

February 23-24, 2011 in Portland, Oregon or
March 9-10, 2011 in Spokane, Washington
Download Registration Form

About The Instructors

J. Chris Hoag
Chris Hoag has recently retired from the USDA NRCS as a riparian plant ecologist and the project leader of the Interagency Riparian/Wetland Plant Development Project at the Plant Materials Center in Aberdeen, Idaho. He has been working on riparian systems and wetlands for over 30 years. Chris has been training conservationists, professionals, consultants, and landowners in riparian dynamics, stream bank erosion control techniques, wetland restoration techniques, and wetland plant propagation techniques since 1991. He co-authored The Practical Stream Bioengineering Guide (1998). He is currently the principal with Hoag Riparian & Wetland Restoration, LLC, a consulting firm specializing in riparian and wetland restoration projects.

Ed Giering III
Ed Giering recently retired from the USDA NRCS as the state conservation engineer for Louisiana where he was responsible for all NRCS engineering activities in the state including coastal wetlands protection, restoration projects, conservation engineering and project construction. He was the program manager for the State of Louisiana Emergency Watershed Program, which conducted recovery and repair work due to Hurricanes Katrina, Rita, Ike and Gustav. Ed also spent 24 years in the private sector as a consulting engineer and is a professional licensed engineer in Louisiana, Mississippi and Arkansas. He has developed designs for and taught classes on wetland restoration as well as streambank stabilization.

Events

Soil Health, Wealth, and Wisdom

Earley to bed and early to rise, makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise.
[1639 J. Clarke Parœmiologia Anglo-Latina]

Range managers promote the health of living soil systems as essential to sustained business viability.

The microbial bio-mass of a soil plays a key role in the productivity of grasslands, which in turn determines such things as the stocking rate of pasture and rangelands.

This microbial bio-mass is the living matter within the soil and, according to Andrew Fraase, a graduate student in North Dakota State University’s School of Natural Resource Sciences, they are important in the soil’s productivity. …

“This microbial bio-mass is made up of bacteria, fungi, nematodes, protozoa – really all the living matter in the soil,” he said. “And it’s important because it’s the key to cycling the residue left on the soil and the roots in the soil and transforming that into plant usable nutrients …

…farmers … are using cover crops to restore degraded soil by increasing the biology under the soil surface. … “As you increase the organic matter in that soil by putting roots into the soil, it’s going to help break up any compaction you have, create more porosity, help the water infiltration rate and the gas exchange,” Fraase said.

Good soil structure also involves good aggregate stability in the soil which, according to Fraase, is a natural formation of soil particles that are cohesively bound together. The binding agent that is key in the soil aggregates is organic matter.

“Why should you care about soil aggregates?” he asked. “Because it’s easier for a plant if it has soil structure, porosity and areas for the roots to move down in the soil profile. This makes it the easier to get to nutrients and water located deeper in the soil profile.” Planting cover crops can also benefit … the bottom line of an operation [as a source of forage].

That forage productivity is a function of soil health is not news. What is news is our evolving appreciation of soil health in terms of a living system. Restored soil is a highly valuable asset in most any setting, and the more intense the land use, the more to be contributed by good soil. Ecological restoration and urban redevelopment have much to gain from the grazing schools of soil husbandry.

There are lots of bits to this puzzle, but when it comes to sustaining life in soil, the energy bit is not to be forgotten. Mulch and compost delivers food energy. Soy bean meal, used to improve soil structure in public turf and playing fields, works similarly.

Cover crops and woody vegetation work to sustain a healthy symbiotic rhizospheric soil community on root exudate rich in food energy. This is a different microbial community than is working on the sloughed root mass, on soy bean meal, mulch and compost – a healthy soil has both a rhizosheric community and a bulk (jargon for not in the rhizopheic soil envelope around a root) soil community thriving in concert.

Gary Jones has posted about this article also, and alludes to a food energy feast available in the context of pulse grazing:

It isn’t just that this reduces compaction, it is also that it pumps biomass into the soil due to “root pruning”. The root systems of many pasture species mirror their above ground growth. When such a plant is grazed it sloughs off an equal amount of its root system, which then regrows apace to the above ground growth. Each “pulse” of grazing in effect pumps another dollop of biomass into the soil thus providing a feast for the micro and macro soil organisms. They convert the biomass into more bugs, but with their lives and deaths mineralize the nutrients making them available to grow more vegetation, and leave a small but valuable residue of humic acids and humates as durably sequestered soil carbon. The more it is done the more that it can be done.

Pulse grazing jolts the system in a good way, and there is a lesson to be learned here that is applicable to urban soils where drastic disturbance often causes the system to loses species diversity. When it comes time to revive soil life, the rate of restoration is slowed by a combination of extremely low population, an excess of predators which restrict re-population, and absent the species diversity needed to share in the restoration dynamic. Pulsed management (and pulse management) is an important tool for overcoming this inertia.

Building a diverse palette of soil microbial species in a drastically disturbed site, this is a worthwhile challenge, this is the acme of success. Soil health, wealth, and wisdom.

Restoration

Tincan Delivers

Tincan, which involves middle school girls in investigative science journalism, has a number of great videos up relating to sustainability issues in the Spokane region. (Example) Elisha Durrant, Tincan’s Research and History Coordinator, pointed me to this project, and these young ladies are doing a great job. It takes a lot of commitment, excellent instruction and great equipment to accomplish this type of a presentation. Hopefully Tin Can’s videos will inspire the rest of us to consider our own media productions. If so, Tin Can is ready to help. One the more amazing aspects of Tin Can’s project is that the well appointed facilities are available for use outside the established program. There is a media lab available to others for training and the film production studio is available for individual use, all for a reasonable price and prior arrangement.

Science Reporters is an innovative after-school program that focuses on increasing middle school girls’ interest in science, technology, engineering and math careers (STEM) through investigative reporting on science issues and video production. Tincan’s Science Reporters began in 2009 with a grant from the National Science Foundation.

Community Resources

Revitalizing the Inland Northwest

I’ve blogged on and off about soil for years. Early on at transectpoints.blogspot.com, later at nscss.org/blogs/psmall. I’ve informed, exhorted, lamented, and joked around, and I’ve gotten precious feedback. Best of all I gained many good connections, and am a better soil scientist, a better business contributor to my community, more of a person, thanks to you folks. And I have missed that.

Recently I had the opportunity to watch a clip of Storm Cunningham’s stirring presentation to the TEDxMidAtlantic 2010 conference. He speaks to the economic dynamo that builds when communities revitalize their resources. Storm Cunningham terms it the restoration economy, and the scope is awesome; natural and cultural resources, urban and rural. I see renewal in terms of soils, and the role I can play, and I get excited. That’s what this blog is about. That’s what Land Profile, Inc. is about.

Restoration