Iowa's Remarkable Soils: The Story of Our Most Vital Resource and How We Can Save It
Sometimes called “black gold,” Iowa’s deep, rich soils are a treasure that formed over thousands of years under the very best of the world’s grasslands—the tallgrass prairie. The soils are diverse and complex and hold within them a record not only of Iowa’s prehistoric past, but also of the changes that took place after settlers utterly transformed the land, as well as the ongoing adjustments taking place today due to climate change. In language that is scientifically sound but accessible to the layperson, Kathleen Woida explains how soils formed and have changed over centuries and millennia in the land between two rivers.

Its soils are what make Iowa a premier agricultural state, both in terms of acres planted and bushels harvested. But in the last hundred years, large-scale intensive agriculture and urban development have severely degraded most of our soils. However, as Woida documents, some innovative Iowans are beginning to repair and regenerate their soils by treating them as the living ecosystem and vast carbon store that they are. To paraphrase Aldo Leopold, these new pioneers are beginning to see their soils as part of a community to which they and their descendants belong, rather than commodities belonging to them.
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Iowa's Remarkable Soils: The Story of Our Most Vital Resource and How We Can Save It
Sometimes called “black gold,” Iowa’s deep, rich soils are a treasure that formed over thousands of years under the very best of the world’s grasslands—the tallgrass prairie. The soils are diverse and complex and hold within them a record not only of Iowa’s prehistoric past, but also of the changes that took place after settlers utterly transformed the land, as well as the ongoing adjustments taking place today due to climate change. In language that is scientifically sound but accessible to the layperson, Kathleen Woida explains how soils formed and have changed over centuries and millennia in the land between two rivers.

Its soils are what make Iowa a premier agricultural state, both in terms of acres planted and bushels harvested. But in the last hundred years, large-scale intensive agriculture and urban development have severely degraded most of our soils. However, as Woida documents, some innovative Iowans are beginning to repair and regenerate their soils by treating them as the living ecosystem and vast carbon store that they are. To paraphrase Aldo Leopold, these new pioneers are beginning to see their soils as part of a community to which they and their descendants belong, rather than commodities belonging to them.
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Iowa's Remarkable Soils: The Story of Our Most Vital Resource and How We Can Save It

Iowa's Remarkable Soils: The Story of Our Most Vital Resource and How We Can Save It

by Kathleen Woida
Iowa's Remarkable Soils: The Story of Our Most Vital Resource and How We Can Save It

Iowa's Remarkable Soils: The Story of Our Most Vital Resource and How We Can Save It

by Kathleen Woida

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Overview

Sometimes called “black gold,” Iowa’s deep, rich soils are a treasure that formed over thousands of years under the very best of the world’s grasslands—the tallgrass prairie. The soils are diverse and complex and hold within them a record not only of Iowa’s prehistoric past, but also of the changes that took place after settlers utterly transformed the land, as well as the ongoing adjustments taking place today due to climate change. In language that is scientifically sound but accessible to the layperson, Kathleen Woida explains how soils formed and have changed over centuries and millennia in the land between two rivers.

Its soils are what make Iowa a premier agricultural state, both in terms of acres planted and bushels harvested. But in the last hundred years, large-scale intensive agriculture and urban development have severely degraded most of our soils. However, as Woida documents, some innovative Iowans are beginning to repair and regenerate their soils by treating them as the living ecosystem and vast carbon store that they are. To paraphrase Aldo Leopold, these new pioneers are beginning to see their soils as part of a community to which they and their descendants belong, rather than commodities belonging to them.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781609387501
Publisher: University of Iowa Press
Publication date: 05/01/2021
Series: Bur Oak Book
Edition description: 1
Pages: 256
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.60(d)

About the Author

Kathleen Woida worked as a geologist in Iowa for twenty years with the Natural Resources Conservation Service. She is currently an adjunct associate professor in the University of Iowa’s Department of Earth and Environmental Sciences. Woida lives in Des Moines, Iowa.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix

Preface xiii

Introduction 1

Part 1 The Inheritance; Fertile Black Gold

1 Profiles of the Underground 11

2 Wealth in Diversity 37

3 The Stories They Can Tell 61

4 Soils on Iowa's Hidden Landscapes 85

Part 2 The Sixth Factor: People, Agriculture, and Soils

5 Reaping the Bounty 105

6 Squandering the Inheritance 119

7 Rediscovering the Living Soil 139

8 Stories from the Field 161

9 Soils, Climate Change, and the Future 187

Glossary 199

Bibliography 211

Index 225

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