Liebig's Chemical Letters
Tede kredo mp3LETTER XIII
My dear Sir,
Having in my last letter spoken of the general principles upon
which the science and art of agriculture must be based, let me
now direct your attention to some of those particulars between
chemistry and agriculture, and demonstrate the impossibility of
perfecting the important art of rearing food for man and animals,
without a profound knowledge of our science.
All plants cultivated as food require for their healthy
sustenance the alkalies and alkaline earths, each in a certain
proportion; and in addition to these, the cerealia do not succeed
in a soil destitute of silica in a soluble condition. The
combinations of this substance found as natural productions,
namely, the silicates, differ greatly in the degree of facility
with which they undergo decomposition, in consequence of the
unequal resistance opposed by their integral parts to the
dissolving power of the atmospheric agencies. Thus the granite of
Corsica degenerates into a powder in a time which scarcely
suffices to deprive the polished granite of Heidelberg of its
lustre.
Some soils abound in silicates so readily decomposable, that in
every one or two years, as much silicate of potash becomes
soluble and fitted for assimilation as is required by the leaves
and straw of a crop of wheat. In Hungary, extensive districts are
not uncommon where wheat and tobacco have been grown alternately
upon the same soil for centuries, the land never receiving back
any of those mineral elements which were withdrawn in the grain
and straw. On the other hand, there are fields in which the
necessary amount of soluble silicate of potash for a single crop
of wheat is not separated from the insoluble masses in the soil
in less than two, three, or even more years.
The term fallow, in Agriculture, designates that period in which
the soil, left to the influence of the atmosphere, becomes
enriched with those soluble mineral constituents. Fallow,
however, does not generally imply an entire cessation of
cultivation, but only an interval in the growth of the cerealia.
That store of silicates and alkalies which is the principal
condition of their success is obtained, if potatoes or turnips
are grown upon the same fields in the intermediate periods, since
these crops do not abstract a particle of silica, and therefore
leave the field equally fertile for the following crop of wheat.
The preceding remarks will render it obvious to you, that the
mechanical working of the soil is the simplest and cheapest
method of rendering the elements of nutrition contained in it
accessible to plants.
But it may be asked, Are there not other means of decomposing the
soil besides its mechanical subdivision? - are there not
substances, which by their chemical operation will equally well
or better render its constituents suitable for entering into
vegetable organisms? Yes: we certainly possess such substances,
and one of them, namely, quick-lime, has been employed for the
last century past in England for this purpose; and it would be
difficult to find a substance better adapted to this service, as
it is simple, and in almost all localities cheap and easily
accessible.
In order to obtain correct views respecting the effect of
quick-lime upon the soil, let me remind you of the first process
employed by the chemist when he is desirous of analysing a
mineral, and for this purpose wishes to bring its elements into a
soluble state. Let the mineral to be examined be, for instance,
feldspar; this substance, taken alone, even when reduced to the
finest powder, requires for its solution to be treated with an
acid for weeks or months; but if we first mix it with quick-lime,
and expose the mixture to a moderately strong heat, the lime
enters into chemical combination with certain elements of the
feldspar, and its alkali (potass) is set free. And now the acid,
even without heat, dissolves not only the lime, but also so much
of the silica of the feldspar as to form a transparent jelly. The
same effect which the lime in this process, with the aid of heat,
exerts upon the feldspar, it produces when it is mixed with the
alkaline argillaceous silicates, and they are for a long time
kept together in a moist state.
Common potters' clay, or pipe-clay, diffused through water, and
added to milk of lime, thickens immediately upon mixing; and if
the mixture is kept for some months, and then treated with acid,
the clay becomes gelatinous, which would not occur without the
admixture with the lime. The lime, in combining with the elements
of the clay, liquifies it; and, what is more remarkable,
liberates the greater part of its alkalies. These interesting
facts were first observed by Fuchs, at Munich: they have not only
led to a more intimate knowledge of the nature and properties of
the hydraulic cements, but, what is far more important, they
explain the effects of caustic lime upon the soil, and guide the
agriculturist in the application of an invaluable means of
opening it, and setting free its alkalies - substances so
important, nay, so indispensable to his crops.
In the month of October the fields of Yorkshire and Oxfordshire
look as it they were covered with snow. Whole square miles are
seen whitened over with quicklime, which during the moist winter
months, exercises its beneficial influence upon the stiff, clayey
soil, of those counties.
According to the humus theory, quick-lime ought to exert the most
noxious influence upon the soil, because all organic matters
contained in it are destroyed by it, and rendered incapable of
yielding their humus to a new vegetation. The facts are indeed
directly contrary to this now abandoned theory: the fertility of
the soil is increased by the lime. The cerealia require the
alkalies and alkaline silicates, which the action of the lime
renders fit for assimilation by the plants. If, in addition to
these, there is any decaying organic matter present in the soil
supplying carbonic acid, it may facilitate their development; but
it is not essential to their growth. If we furnish the soil with
ammonia, and the phosphates, which are indispensable to the
cerealia, with the alkaline silicates, we have all the conditions
necessary to ensure an abundant harvest. The atmosphere is an
inexhaustible store of carbonic acid.
A no less favourable influence than that of lime is exercised
upon the soil of peaty land by the mere act of burning it: this
greatly enhances its fertility. We have not long been acquainted
with the remarkable change which the properties of clay undergo
by burning. The observation was first made in the process of
analysing the clay silicates. Many of these, in their natural
state, are not acted on by acids, but they become perfectly
soluble if heated to redness before the application of the acid.
This property belongs to potters' clay, pipe-clay, loam, and many
different modifications of clay in soils. In their natural state
they may be boiled in concentrated sulphuric acid, without
sensible change; but if feebly burned, as is done with the
pipe-clay in many alum manufactories, they dissolve in the acid
with the greatest facility, the contained silica being separated
like jelly in a soluble state. Potters' clay belongs to the most
sterile kinds of soil, and yet it contains within itself all the
constituent elements essential to a most luxurious growth of
plants; but their mere presence is insufficient to secure this
end. The soil must be accessible to the atmosphere, to its
oxygen, to its carbonic acid; these must penetrate it, in order
to secure the conditions necessary to a happy and vigorous
development of the roots. The elements present must be brought
into that peculiar state of combination which will enable them to
enter into plants. Plastic clay is wanting in these properties;
but they are imparted to it by a feeble calcination.
At Hardwicke Court, near Gloucester, I have seen a garden (Mr.
Baker's) consisting of a stiff clay, which was perfectly sterile,
become by mere burning extremely fertile. The operation was
extended to a depth of three feet. This was an expensive process,
certainly; but it was effectual.
The great difference in the properties of burnt and unburnt clay
is illustrated by what is seen in brick houses, built in moist
situations. In the town of Flanders, for instance, where most
buildings are of brick, effloresences of salts cover the surfaces
of the walls, like a white nap, within a few days after they are
erected. If this saline incrustation is washed away by the rain,
it soon re-appears; and this is even observed on walls which,
like the gateway of Lisle, have been erected for centuries. These
saline incrustations consist of carbonates and sulphates, with
alkaline bases; and it is well known these act an important part
in vegetation. The influence of lime in their production is
manifested by their appearing first at the place where the mortar
and brick come into contact.
It will now be obvious to you, that in a mixture of clay with
lime, all the conditions exist for the solution of the silicated
clay, and the solubility of the alkaline silicates. The lime
gradually dissolving in water charged with carbonic acid, acts
like milk of lime upon the clay. This explains also the
favourable influence which marl (by which term all those
varieties of clay rich in chalk are designated) exerts upon most
kinds of soil. There are marly soils which surpass all others in
fertility for all kinds of plants; but I believe marl in a burnt
state must be far more effective, as well as other materials
possessing a similar composition; as, for instance, those species
of limestone which are adapted to the preparation of hydraulic
cements, - for these carry to the soil not only the alkaline
bases useful to plants, but also silica in a state capable of
assimilation.
The ashes of coals and lignite are also excellent means of
ameliorating the soil, and they are used in many places for this
purpose. The most suitable may be readily known by their property
of forming a gelatinous mass when treated with acids, or by
becoming, when mixed with cream of lime, like hydraulic cement, -
solid and hard as stone.
I have now, I trust, explained to your satisfaction, that the
mechanical operations of agriculture - the application of lime
and chalk to lands, and the burning of clay - depend upon one and
the same scientific principle: they are means of accelerating the
decomposition of the alkaline clay silicates, in order to provide
plants, at the beginning of a new vegetation, with certain
inorganic matters indispensable for their nutrition.