Since ancient times, farmers knew that plants grown on land that hadn’t been planted on yet were richer than those that have had years of farming on. This caused them to move to new untouched areas, and had the same result each time. Over time they discovered that it could be improved by adding certain substances to the soil. Substances that were used on soil in ancient times were varied from the people, the plants grown and the type of soil. Eventually fertilizer technology improved. More discoveries were found, the Egyptians were known to add ashes from burn weeds to soil. The Ancient Greek and Roman used different animal waste matter depending on the type of soil or the plant being grown. Romans also used marl and liming materials to supply calcium and reduce the soil’s acidity. It was also know that if you grew vegetables before growing wheat was beneficial. Other types of materials used to add to soil were sea-shells, clay, vegetable waste, waste from other work that was happening and other kinds of trash. These substances were frequently used as fertilizers until bones and deposits of sodium nitrate were first used as chemical fertilizers, which then created natural and synthetic fertilizers available in numerous forms around the world.
Plants cannot live without primary nutritional elements. These elements are nitrogen, phosphorous, and potassium. Usually, the nutrient content of a manufactured fertilizer is expressed as nitrogen (N), phosphorus pentoxide (P2O5), and potash (K2O). The sources of nitrogen in fertilizers is used for many chemical reactions including ammonia (NH3), diammonium phosphate ((NH4) 2HPO4), ammonium nitrate(NH4NO3), ammonium sulfate ((NH4) 2SO4), calcium cyanamide (CaCN2), calcium nitrate (Ca(NO3) 2), sodium nitrate (NaNO3), and urea (N2H4CO). Phosphorus is generally used as a phosphate, such as diammonium phosphate ((NH4) 2HPO4) or calcium dihydrogen phosphate (Ca(H2PO4) 2). Potassium comes from potassium sulfate (K2SO4) or potassium chloride (KCl). The phosphorus content of a fertilizer is specified as the amount of P2O5 because this is the form of phosphoric acid containing no water. Secondary elements include calcium, magnesium, and sulfur. Micro nutrients include small amounts of boron, chlorine, cobalt, copper, iron, manganese, molybdenum and zinc. Combing all these elements, a plant can grow to be health and full of nutrients. Plants obtain all these nutritional elements from the soil. If the soil is lacking in any of the primary elements, fertilizers must be added. From ancient times, farmers have discovered to do so.
The benefits of using fertilizers are that it does its job. Fertilizers provide the soil with more chemical elements essential for plants growth. It increases plant growth, so that farmers or anyone else who uses them produce a bigger harvest. Fertilized crops grow faster and resist drought, diseases and insect attacks. With benefits, there are also disadvantages in using fertilizers.
Manufactures monitor their product at each stage of production, to ensure that the quality of the fertilizer. Raw materials and the finished products are subjected to various physical and chemical tests. For each test they must meet the specifications previously developed. The characteristic that are tested include pH, appearance, density and melting point. Fertilizer production is governmentally managed, composition analysis tests are run on samples to determine how much nitrogen, phosphate and other elements affecting the chemical composition there is. A lot of other tests are also performed, depending on the type of fertilizer being used and its purpose.
The purpose of using a fertilizer is to enhance the soil’s chemical elements that are essential for plant nutrition. We depend on fertilizers to provide us with a bigger harvest and faster plant growth. Without fertilizers it would be difficult to find fresh soil that contained chemical elements essential for plants nutrition. We need fertilizer to provide us with the food we eat, but we have to be careful about how we use them and know of the side effect that could happen to the environment.
Log:
Nov 23-25 – 3 hours, researching
Nov 27-29 – 3 hours, putting it all together
Nov 30 – 1 hour, editing
For more information:
http://www.thecanadianencyclopedia.com/index.cfm?PgNm=TCE&Params=A1ARTA0002780
http://www.madehow.com/Volume-3/Fertilizer.html
Resources:
Lichy, C. T. (2009). fertilizer. In Grolier Multimedia Encyclopedia. Retrieved November 23, 2009, from Grolier Online http://gme.grolier.com/cgi-bin/article?assetid=0105060-0
Lessman, G. M. (2009). Fertilizers. (A. L. Allen, Rev.). In The New Book of Knowledge. Retrieved November 24, 2009, from Grolier Online http://nbk.grolier.com/cgi-bin/article?assetid=a2010090-




fertilizer indeed useful for our environment...good work!!!!
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