SOILS-L: 199512XX

is the compilation of discussion during Dec 95

via AB4EL Web Digests @ SunSITE

AGROMOMY Homepage @ SunSITE


>From root@crcnis1.unl.edu Fri Dec  1 08:36 EST 1995
Date: Fri, 1 Dec 1995 02:22:41 -0600
Message-Id: <199512010822.AA12076@crcnis1.unl.edu>
Subject: SOILS-L digest 417

Contents:
Chemical residues in compost (jocke@texoma.com (John Ockels))
conference hunting ("Y.Zhou" <Y.Zhou@geo.hull.ac.uk>)



Date: Thu, 30 Nov 1995 10:15:48 -0600 From: jocke@texoma.com (John Ockels) Subject: Chemical residues in compost I would appreciate any help you might be able to give in answereing this question from a local (North texas) backyard composter: "We use a popular horse worm medicine called Zimecterin (Ivermectin) Paste 1.87%. Does the active chemical in this worm medicine persist in compost whose food stock includes manures from horses doctored with this substance?" This product is distributed by the Farnam Companies in Phoenix. I would add that these folks who ask this question are wonderful organic farmers and would deeply appreciate any help you could provide. Thanks in advance for your consideration. John Ockels, PhD Environmental Coordiantor Texoma Council of Governments Sherman, Texas
Date: Thu, 30 Nov 1995 15:21:30 +0000 (GMT) From: "Y.Zhou" <Y.Zhou@geo.hull.ac.uk> Subject: conference hunting Hi Friends I am currently involved in a project on the relationship between erosion and slope vegetation. The study focuses on the roles of a pine forest on erosion control and slope stabilization in a gorge. I have been hunting a conference in which I could introduce the preliminary result of this study and share some idears with other colleages. A very intereting conference called 'VEGETATION AND SLOPE STABILIZATION' has been hold in Oxford, UK, last September. Is anybody know any information about the coming-soon conference of this kind or similar? I would be appreciated very much if he or she could offer me the information. Thank you very much for your friendly help! ----------------------------------------------------------------- Yue Zhou School of Geography and Earth Resources The University of Hull Hull, HU6 7RX, UK Tel: (44) 1482 466332(at office), (44) 1482 803607(at home) Fax: (44) 1482 466340, Email: Y.Zhou@geography.hull.ac.uk -----------------------------------------------------------------
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>From root@crcnis1.unl.edu Sat Dec  2 08:39 EST 1995
Date: Sat, 2 Dec 1995 02:23:06 -0600
Message-Id: <199512020823.AA27941@crcnis1.unl.edu>
Subject: SOILS-L digest 418

Contents:
 Chemical residues in compost -Svar (Torsten Muller <Torsten.Muller@agsci.kvl.dk>)



Date: Fri, 01 Dec 1995 12:56:44 +0100 From: Torsten Muller <Torsten.Muller@agsci.kvl.dk> Subject: Chemical residues in compost -Svar There is a lab in Germany that made a lot of research in compost-quality and organic farming which maybe can help to get informations about persistence of organic residues (medicine) in compost: Universitaet Kassel Fachgebiet Oekologischer Landbau Nordbahnhofstr. 1a D-37213 Witzenhausen phone: +49 5542 981565, fax: +49 5542 981568 The knowledge about persistence of organic residues in compost is very poor in general. Unfortunately a lot of researchers dealing with compost are publishing in very small journals. So, if anybody has some brand new results, it could be interesting to hearing about that here. Dr. Torsten Mueller The Royal Veterinary and Agricultural University Department of Agricultural Sciences Section of Soil, Water and Plant Nutrition Thorvaldsensvej 40, DK-1871 Frederiksberg C (Copenhagen), Denmark Phone: + 45 35283499, Fax: + 45 35283460 e-mail: torsten.muller@agsci.kvl.dk
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>From root@crcnis1.unl.edu Sun Dec  3 18:15 EST 1995
Date: Sun, 3 Dec 1995 02:23:58 -0600
Message-Id: <199512030823.AA03766@crcnis1.unl.edu>
Subject: SOILS-L digest 419

Contents:
Re: your mail - Subscribe/Unsubscribe Instructions ("Warren E. Clark" <ag-pr@agpr.com>)



Date: Sat, 2 Dec 1995 03:58:28 -0600 (CST) From: "Warren E. Clark" <ag-pr@agpr.com> Subject: Re: your mail - Subscribe/Unsubscribe Instructions At 10:50 AM 11/27/95 -0600, you wrote: > > >Does anyone have the address and the comand to get off this list. > > You may find the "Subscribe/Unsubscribe" commands for 'soils-l' and more than 50 other ag-related mailing lists on our web site (ag mailing lists page) at the address listed in my signature block below. If any 'soils-l' subscribers have suggestions for additional ag mailing lists, or agLINKS(sm) we should add to our web site, please let me know. Best wishes... Warren E. Clark, President Clark Consulting International, Inc. 14N921 Lac Du Beatrice West Dundee, IL 60118-3115 Tel: 708-836-5100, Fax: 708-836-5140, E-mail: ag-pr@agpr.com Check out our "Internet AgInfo Gateway" at URL: http://www.agpr.com/consulting/ **Providing worldwide agricultural public relations and marketing services consulting, including "AgWebsite InfoNetworking" services.**
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>From root@crcnis1.unl.edu Mon Dec  4 08:37 EST 1995
Date: Mon, 4 Dec 1995 02:24:35 -0600
Message-Id: <199512040824.AA12061@crcnis1.unl.edu>
Subject: SOILS-L digest 420

Contents:
Soil moisture modeling (alexander.nidorf@linacre.oxford.ac.uk (Alexander Nidorf))
Soil moisture modeling (JOHN BAIR <john.bair@filebank.cts.com>)



Date: Sun, 03 Dec 1995 18:42:22 +0000 From: alexander.nidorf@linacre.oxford.ac.uk (Alexander Nidorf) Subject: Soil moisture modeling Currently I'm a graduate student at the Environmental Change Unit, University of Oxford. As part of masters thesis I'd like to model the effects of projected climate change on agricultural output in the Imperial Valley, California. I need some advice on modeling soil moisture and evapotraspiration in extreme conditions. If anyone has any experience in this area I'd like to ask: 1. What models have been developed to predict the effects of climate/temperature on irrigation? Have irrigation models been developed that can be used for this sort of study? 2. What soil and/or crop models deal well with heat stress and drought? I'll be in El Centro over Christmas. If anyone on this list lives in the Imperial Valley or San Diego County areas please let me know. I'd like to discuss these issues further with someone working in the area. Thanks, Alex Nidorf Environmental Change Unit School of Geography University of Oxford
Date: Sun, 03 Dec 95 16:04:00 -0800 From: JOHN BAIR <john.bair@filebank.cts.com> Subject: Soil moisture modeling try this gentleman from CalPoly ..his address is at the top..he has models for eto............... Date: 11-16-95 (12:59) * Number: 89135 of 90072 (Refer# NONE) To: john.bair@filebank.cts.com, JOHN BAIR From: sstyles@oboe.aix.calpoly.edu, STUART W STYLES Subj: Re: <NONE> Date: Thu, 16 Nov 1995 12:59:29 -0800 Message-Id: <9511162059.AA220854@oboe.aix.calpoly.edu> To: JOHN BAIR <john.bair@filebank.cts.com> From: sstyles@oboe.aix.calpoly.edu (Stuart W. Styles) Subject: Re: <NONE> >I do not have the capability to SLIP OR SHELL...is there a listserver at >Cal Poly ? Don't know. Why don't you let me know what you are interested in and we can send out the info snail mail. ______________________________________________________________________________ Stuart W. Styles, PE Phone (805)756-2429 Irrigation Training and Research Center FAX (805)756-2433 Cal Poly State University - Ag Engr Dept sstyles@oboe.aix.calpoly.edu San Luis Obispo, CA 93407 http://www.calpoly.edu/~ae/itrc.html More -> (Y)es (N)o non(S)top (H)elp ? S ______________________________________________________________________________ (H)elp, (84365-90072), Message Read Command? ______________________________________________________________________________
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>From root@crcnis1.unl.edu Tue Dec  5 08:53 EST 1995
Date: Tue, 5 Dec 1995 02:32:49 -0600
Message-Id: <199512050832.AA02547@crcnis1.unl.edu>
Subject: SOILS-L digest 421

Contents:
internet=(soils-l@unl.edu.) (sdn05564@sdn.dk)
Aqua regia ("Morten Olsson" <OM190465@server1.geogr.ku.dk>)
Introduction (<Pat_Coyle@csgcalchem.ccmail.compuserve.com>)
Re: Introduction (Nilantha Hulugalle <nilantha@mv.pi.csiro.au>)
Re: polyacrylamide (Val Snow <vos@adl.dwr.csiro.au>)
Fertilizer N reducing the rate of OM mineralization (Dean Stewart <STEWARTD@tui.lincoln.ac.nz>)
Re: Aqua regia (Macorn95@aol.com)



Date: Mon, 04 Dec 1995 09:35:00 CET From: sdn05564@sdn.dk Subject: internet=(soils-l@unl.edu.) Can anybody tel me if there exists a GIS list? Thanks Niels
Date: Mon, 4 Dec 1995 12:21:14 +0100 From: "Morten Olsson" <OM190465@server1.geogr.ku.dk> Subject: Aqua regia Hallo to all! I have a question concerning aqua regia in soil analysis: Does someone on the list have an idea about the theory and background for analysing soil nutrients in aqua regia. It is the macro- and micro soil- cations that I have analysed in a project concerning forest soils, but I need some more information of how, and why this strong acid is used for analysing soil samples and what fractions of the cations is extracted. I would be gratefull for any information or fx selected litterature about the subject. Morten Olsson Institute of Geography University of Copenhagen 1350 Copenhagen K Denmark e-mail: om190465@geogr.ku.dk
Date: 04 Dec 95 11:33:51 EST From: <Pat_Coyle@csgcalchem.ccmail.compuserve.com> Subject: Introduction I am Patrick Coyle, a research chemist at Callaway Chemical Company. Among other products our company makes a line of emulsion and solution copolymers of acrylamide. About two years ago Janet Roloff had an article in Science News (Science News, Vol. 144, pgs 280-1) about using polyacrylamide to halt soil erosion in irrigated fields. Always on the lookout for possible new markets for our products, I did some literature searching, but could only find some articles dating back to 1986 in Soil Science. Unfortunately, I got tied up in some other things and didn't have a chance to follow-up at that time. Is anyone still working on this type research? If so, I would be interested in getting some pointers to some literature sources or possibly contact with a researcher. Patrick Coyle Research Chemist Custom Specialty Chemicals Callaway Chemical Company
Date: Tue, 5 Dec 1995 08:47:17 +1000 From: Nilantha Hulugalle <nilantha@mv.pi.csiro.au> Subject: Re: Introduction > I am Patrick Coyle, a research chemist at Callaway Chemical Company. > Among other products our company makes a line of emulsion and solution > copolymers of acrylamide. > > About two years ago Janet Roloff had an article in Science News > (Science News, Vol. 144, pgs 280-1) about using polyacrylamide to halt > soil erosion in irrigated fields. Always on the lookout for possible > new markets for our products, I did some literature searching, but > could only find some articles dating back to 1986 in Soil Science. > Unfortunately, I got tied up in some other things and didn't have a > chance to follow-up at that time. > > Is anyone still working on this type research? If so, I would be > interested in getting some pointers to some literature sources or > possibly contact with a researcher. > > Patrick Coyle > Research Chemist > Custom Specialty Chemicals > Callaway Chemical Company Dr. Yin Chan at the Biological & Chemical Research Institute of the New South Wales Dept. of Agriculture ate Rydalmere, New South Wales, Australia is doing some work in theis area. His address is: chany@agric.nsw.gov.au Regards, Nilantha Hulugalle, Australian Cotton Research Institute, NSW Agriculture, Narrabri, NSW 2390, Australia
Date: Tue, 05 Dec 1995 08:17:00 +1000 From: Val Snow <vos@adl.dwr.csiro.au> Subject: Re: polyacrylamide Dear Patrick, I suggest that you contact Dr Bob Sojka (sokja@kimberly.ars.pn.usbr.gov) who has been working in this area for a number of years. A recent publication is Trout T.J., Sojka R.E., Lenz R.D. 1995 Polyacrylamide effect on furrow erosionand infiltration. Trans. ASAE 38(3): 761-766. Val Snow > About two years ago Janet Roloff had an article in Science News > (Science News, Vol. 144, pgs 280-1) about using to halt > soil erosion in irrigated fields. Always on the lookout for possible .... > Is anyone still working on this type research? If so, I would be > interested in getting some pointers to some literature sources or > possibly contact with a researcher. > > Patrick Coyle > Research Chemist > Custom Specialty Chemicals > Callaway Chemical Company _____________________________________________________________________ Val Snow CSIRO Division of Water Resources PB 2 Glen Osmond SA 5064 AUSTRALIA Phone:+61-8-303-8743 Fax:+61-8-303-8750 Email:vos@adl.dwr.csiro.au
Date: Tue, 05 Dec 1995 11:03:39 +1300 From: Dean Stewart <STEWARTD@tui.lincoln.ac.nz> Subject: Fertilizer N reducing the rate of OM mineralization Some results from a laboratory incubation I did have shown that adding N fertilizer decreased the rate of N mineralization from mushroom compost amended soils. I am aware of other work that has found added N may reduce the rate of organic matter decomposition (i.e. reviewed by Kare Fog in Biological Reviews 1988, 63:433-462). This latter work is mainly on organic materials with high C:N ratios and lignin contents, and low N contents. In contrast mushroom compost has a C:N of 18 and contains 1.8% N, however the organic N it contains is resistant to mineralization. Has anyone found similar results to these with composts or other organic materials of similar quality ??? Dean Stewart AgResearch c/- Department of Soil Science Lincoln University P.O. Box 84 Canterbury New Zealand Phone: (3) 3253 888 Fax: (3) 3253 607
Date: Mon, 4 Dec 1995 23:42:59 -0500 From: Macorn95@aol.com Subject: Re: Aqua regia PLEASE SEND COMMAND TO GET OFF THE LIST. THANKS
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>From root@crcnis1.unl.edu Wed Dec  6 08:48 EST 1995
Date: Wed, 6 Dec 1995 02:33:28 -0600
Message-Id: <199512060833.AA21098@crcnis1.unl.edu>
Subject: SOILS-L digest 422

Contents:
      Soil Quality Symposium ("RICHARD MACEWAN" <RJM@fs3.ballarat.edu.au>)
7 positions in Australia ("P. Grace" <gracep@adl.soils.csiro.au>)
Soil Quality Symposium (carterjn@unixg.ubc.ca (Jeremy N. Carter))



Date: Wed, 6 Dec 1995 12:14:36 GMT+1000 From: "RICHARD MACEWAN" <RJM@fs3.ballarat.edu.au> Subject: Soil Quality Symposium INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM "Advances in soil quality for land management: science, practice and policy" Ballarat, Victoria, AUSTRALIA. 17th - 19th April 1996 AIMS To provide an international forum for debate on the science of soil quality To improve understanding of functions, processes, attributes and indicators of soil quality To examine the practical application of the soil quality concept in land management and land use policy making For further details and registration form contact: Paul Ryan, Centre For Environmental Management, University of Ballarat, PO Box 663, Ballarat 3353 AUS. Email: pryan@fs3.ballarat.edu.au Paul will be away from Ballarat till 24 December. Urgent inquirers can contact me. Regards, Richard MacEwan ****************************** Richard MacEwan, School of Science University of Ballarat, PO Box 663, BALLARAT 3353 AUS Phone: 053 279221 Fax: 053 279240 ##########
Date: Wed, 6 Dec 1995 15:15:23 +1030 (CST) From: "P. Grace" <gracep@adl.soils.csiro.au> Subject: 7 positions in Australia Soils boys and girls, There are currently 7 positions up for grabs in sunny Australia at the CRC for Weed Management Systems. As weeds need soil to get along in life, I hope you excuse the diversion. I will not bore you with details but they are..... POSTDOCTORAL FELLOWS / RESEARCH OFFICERS Plant pathologist Bioeconomic modeller Weed ecologist Resource economist Population biologist Population ecologist Revegetation ecologist Please contact Peter Ninnes for details... crcweeds@waite.adelaide.edu.au Thanks for the indulgence
Date: Tue, 5 Dec 1995 21:04:25 -0800 (PST) From: carterjn@unixg.ubc.ca (Jeremy N. Carter) Subject: Soil Quality Symposium Me again, I'm just getting too much good e-mail today!!! This is definitely going to interest you. Jeremy :) >Date: Tue, 5 Dec 1995 19:11:27 -0600 >Originator: soils-l@unl.edu >Errors-To: jp@unlinfo.unl.edu >Reply-To: <soils-l@unl.edu> >Sender: soils-l@unl.edu >Version: 5.5 -- Copyright (c) 1991/92, Anastasios Kotsikonas >From: "RICHARD MACEWAN" <RJM@fs3.ballarat.edu.au> >To: Multiple recipients of list <soils-l@unl.edu> >Subject: Soil Quality Symposium > >INTERNATIONAL SYMPOSIUM > >"Advances in soil quality for land management: science, practice and >policy" > >Ballarat, Victoria, AUSTRALIA. 17th - 19th April 1996 > >AIMS > >To provide an international forum for debate on the science of soil >quality >To improve understanding of functions, processes, attributes and >indicators of soil quality >To examine the practical application of the soil quality concept in >land management and land use policy making > >For further details and registration form contact: >Paul Ryan, Centre For Environmental Management, University of >Ballarat, PO Box 663, Ballarat 3353 AUS. >Email: pryan@fs3.ballarat.edu.au > >Paul will be away from Ballarat till 24 December. Urgent inquirers >can contact me. > >Regards, Richard MacEwan > >****************************** >Richard MacEwan, School of Science >University of Ballarat, PO Box 663, BALLARAT 3353 AUS >Phone: 053 279221 Fax: 053 279240 > >########## > >
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>From root@crcnis1.unl.edu Thu Dec  7 08:48 EST 1995
Date: Thu, 7 Dec 1995 02:33:28 -0600
Message-Id: <199512070833.AA21098@crcnis1.unl.edu>
Subject: SOILS-L digest 423

Contents:
SOILS-L digest 423 LOST



Date: Thu, 7 Dec 1995 01:33:28 -0600 From: AB4EL <modena@SunSITE.unc.edu> Subject: SOILS-L digest 423 LOST SOILS-L digest 423 LOST
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>From root@crcnis1.unl.edu Fri Dec  8 08:48 EST 1995
Date: Fri, 8 Dec 1995 02:33:28 -0600
Message-Id: <199512080833.AA21098@crcnis1.unl.edu>
Subject: SOILS-L digest 424

Contents:
SOILS-L digest 424 LOST



Date: Fri, 8 Dec 1995 01:33:28 -0600 From: AB4EL <modena@SunSITE.unc.edu> Subject: SOILS-L digest 424 LOST SOILS-L digest 424 LOST
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>From root@crcnis1.unl.edu Sat Dec  9 08:48 EST 1995
Date: Sat, 9 Dec 1995 02:33:28 -0600
Message-Id: <199512090833.AA21098@crcnis1.unl.edu>
Subject: SOILS-L digest 425

Contents:
SOILS-L digest 425 LOST



Date: Sat, 8 Dec 1995 01:33:28 -0600 From: AB4EL <modena@SunSITE.unc.edu> Subject: SOILS-L digest 425 LOST SOILS-L digest 425 LOST
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>From root@crcnis1.unl.edu Sun Dec 10 08:48 EST 1995
Date: Sun, 10 Dec 1995 02:33:28 -0600
Message-Id: <199512100833.AA21098@crcnis1.unl.edu>
Subject: SOILS-L digest 426

Contents:
SOILS-L digest 426 LOST



Date: Sun, 10 Dec 1995 01:33:28 -0600 From: AB4EL <modena@SunSITE.unc.edu> Subject: SOILS-L digest 426 LOST SOILS-L digest 426 LOST
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>From root@crcnis1.unl.edu Mon Dec 11 08:48 EST 1995
Date: Mon, 11 Dec 1995 02:33:28 -0600
Message-Id: <199512110833.AA21098@crcnis1.unl.edu>
Subject: SOILS-L digest 427

Contents:
SOILS-L digest 427 LOST



Date: Mon, 11 Dec 1995 01:33:28 -0600 From: AB4EL <modena@SunSITE.unc.edu> Subject: SOILS-L digest 427 LOST SOILS-L digest 427 LOST
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>From root@crcnis1.unl.edu Tue Dec 12 08:48 EST 1995
Date: Tue, 12 Dec 1995 02:33:28 -0600
Message-Id: <199512120833.AA21098@crcnis1.unl.edu>
Subject: SOILS-L digest 428

Contents:
SOILS-L digest 428 LOST



Date: Tue, 12 Dec 1995 01:33:28 -0600 From: AB4EL <modena@SunSITE.unc.edu> Subject: SOILS-L digest 428 LOST SOILS-L digest 428 LOST
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>From root@crcnis1.unl.edu Wed Dec 20 21:35 EST 1995
Date: Wed, 20 Dec 1995 15:22:59 -0600
Message-Id: <199512202122.AA08388@crcnis1.unl.edu>
Subject: SOILS-L digest 429

Contents:
Looking for collaborators (M.Turner@massey.ac.nz (Max Turner ))



Date: Wed, 20 Dec 1995 21:08:51 +0000 From: M.Turner@massey.ac.nz (Max Turner ) Subject: Looking for collaborators Dear Listers I would like to use the list for something a little different and I hope you can assist me in my search. I am looking to identify a small group of Soil Science lecturers (especially in the soil fertility/fertilisers/land use areas) from a number of different, english speaking countries. Probably some of the people I need to know are not even current subscribers to this list, in which case you may be able to assist me by mentioning this note to the appropriate person(s). What I am looking to do is to offer these potential collaborators an opportunity to participate in an exciting international educational opportunity (details of which I am happy to elaborate once an expression of interest has been received). I hope to make contact with a global group of soils lecturers who are as enamoured as I am with the use of the computer as an educational tool. If you are of like mind then please contact me and acquaint me with your interest in participating, together with your skills and special area of expertise in Soil Science. For those with an interest in cooperation, but who possess limited computer skills, I am prepared to do much of the development work if your area of special interest is appropriate to the project; so lack of computing skills need be no deterrent. All told I hope to identify at least 10-12 enthusiastic lecturers, teaching students at around the 300-400 level soils (ie students with at least some basic understanding of how soils work) or at the post-graduate level, from a number of different countries and climates. If this sounds interesting to you please take the time to contact me at Massey University (in New Zealand). Incidentally this initiative has the support and backing of the Professor of Soil Science (Prof Russ Tillman), the Dean of the Agricultural and Horticultural Faculty (Prof Robert Anderson) at Massey University, so it is a legitimate undertaking. I look forward to hearing from you if you wish to be involved. Sincerely Max Turner (Senior Lecturer in Soil Science) Please reply by email to: M.Turner@massey.ac.nz
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>From root@crcnis1.unl.edu Thu Dec 21 21:36 EST 1995
Date: Thu, 21 Dec 1995 15:23:01 -0600
Message-Id: <199512212123.AA25668@crcnis1.unl.edu>
Subject: SOILS-L digest 430

Contents:
Re: CO2 Emissions (jaartz@blue.weeg.uiowa.edu (Joe Artz))
Re: CO2 Emissions (Pilgrampl@aol.com)



Date: Thu, 21 Dec 1995 07:28:46 -0600 From: jaartz@blue.weeg.uiowa.edu (Joe Artz) Subject: Re: CO2 Emissions In reply to Patrick Joyce, concerning the rates of wasteage and CO2 emissions as organic matter is lost from a soil. He doesn't tell us the time scales he's interested in, but my interest in this topic involves time scales on the order of 100-10,000 years. When an A horizon becomes buried, and therefore removed from additions of carbon from decaying organisms, etc., it begins to lose organic carbon. In the following three studies, organic carbon in buried soils was compared with that of a nearby, surface A horizon that was not buried. In all three studies, burial was caused by anthropogenic factors. Hallberg et al. (1980) Proc. Soil Sci. Soc. America 42:339-343 Time of burial: 100 years beneath spoils from railroad cut Carbon content of surface A: 2.6% Carrbon content of buried A: ca. 1.5% Loss: 42% Mattingly and Williams (1962) J. Soil Sci. 13:254-258 Soil buried 1500 years under Roman amphitheater Buried A: .77-.8% organic carbon Surface A: 2.4% Loss 68% Gardiner and Walsh 1966 Proc. Royal Irish Acad. 65C:29-35 Soil buried 4000 years under burial mound Buried A: 1.1% Surface A: 4.9% Loss: 78% My impression is that the rate of decay is greatest in the first 100 years following burial, but then begins to become more gradual. Organic carbon bound tightly with clays would be the last to be lost, and can stay around for 10s of thousands of years. My literature on this subject is very out-of-date. Maybe others on the list can add some more recent sources. I'd be interested in hearing them.
Date: Thu, 21 Dec 1995 12:56:25 -0500 From: Pilgrampl@aol.com Subject: Re: CO2 Emissions I am looking to talk with people that are in the bioremedation of petroleum cantaminated soils. Thank you Peter Lawrence
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>From root@crcnis1.unl.edu Fri Dec 22 21:34 EST 1995
Date: Fri, 22 Dec 1995 15:23:21 -0600
Message-Id: <199512222123.AA09397@crcnis1.unl.edu>
Subject: SOILS-L digest 431

Contents:
CALL FOR PAPERS ("Ted Zobeck" <tzobeck@lubbock.ars.ag.gov>)
Re:  Bioremediation of Petroleum Cont. Soils (SGAPI@aol.com)
Re: Bioremediation of Petroleum Cont. Soils (Pilgrampl@aol.com)



Date: 22 Dec 1995 11:14:17 -0600 From: "Ted Zobeck" <tzobeck@lubbock.ars.ag.gov> Subject: CALL FOR PAPERS CALL FOR PAPERS AND SESSION ORGANIZERS Fifth International Conference on Desert Development "Desert Development: The Endless Frontier" 12-17 August 1996 Texas Tech University, Lubbock, Texas, USA Individuals are invited to present papers on all topics related to scientific, engineering, social, biomedical, and economic aspects of desert development and human responses to arid environments. Persons are also invited to organize special sessions during the conference and are encouraged to contact the conference chairman. Subjects to be addressed include application of new technology, land degradation, soil and water conservation, irrigation, watershed and range management, salt tolerance, animal production, socioeconomic and biomedical aspects, agrochemical and pollution control, alternative energy sources, and environmental protection and desert ecosystems. Abstract and session proposals should be one page, single spaced, and 200-300 words in length. They should be submitted by 15 February 1996 to: Dr. Idris Rhea Traylor, Jr., Executive Director Office of International Affairs Texas Tech University Box 41036 Lubbock, TX 79409 USA Telephone: 806/742-2218 Fax: 806/742-1954 Internet: AlRDL@TTACSl.TTU.EDU The Fifth International Conference on Desert Development will be held under the auspices of the International Desert Development Commission, in cooperation with the Office of International Affairs and its International Center for Arid and Semiarid Land Studies of Texas Tech University and other national and international organizations.
Date: Fri, 22 Dec 1995 13:57:04 -0500 From: SGAPI@aol.com Subject: Re: Bioremediation of Petroleum Cont. Soils On 12/21/95 Peter Lawrence wrote: <> <<cantaminated soils.>> <<Thank you>> <<Peter Lawrence>> Peter, Bioremediation of petroleum contaminated soils has proven to be an effective remediation technology. It is however, not suitable for all soil types or for all types of petroleum products. As with any remediation technology, there are limitations which must be examined prior to implementation to ensure that remediation goals are met. There are many good references on this subject, and I would be happy to provide you with a list of references in you desire. I am employed by an environmental consulting firm and we have had very good success bioremediating petroleum contaminated soils. I can provide some actual data on the success of these projects if it will help you. Please respond via e-mail. Best Wishes, Fred Corey Environmental Scientist Shevenell~Gallen and Assoc. Inc. RR 1, Box 2845 Monticello, ME 04760 sgapi@aol.com
Date: Fri, 22 Dec 1995 15:28:45 -0500 From: Pilgrampl@aol.com Subject: Re: Bioremediation of Petroleum Cont. Soils Dear Mr Corey,] I am aware of the general funtion and proccesses of bioremedation. Currently I am working on an independant research project on a site near my university and would like more information on the enzymatic processes involved and techniques of isolating and identifying the different products as the petroleum is being broken down. I woul dlike some information on your company as I lived in that part of Maine as a HIgh School student and would like to return someday if I could find a job in this field. Thanks for your time, Peter Lawrence
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