The effect of different fertilizer treatments on the nitrogen and organic matter content of a soil when cropped to a definite rotation for a period of twenty-four years

In a large part of the soil fertility studies that have been attempted in the past, a great number of the results obtained were based almost entirely on crop yields. These yields were used as the final criterion upon which to draw conclusions as to whether a given system of soil management was a pro...

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Main Author: Salomon, Milton
Other Authors: Agronomy
Format: Others
Language:en_US
Published: Virginia Agricultural and Mechanical College and Polytechnic Institute 2015
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/53742
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-537422021-01-15T05:35:07Z The effect of different fertilizer treatments on the nitrogen and organic matter content of a soil when cropped to a definite rotation for a period of twenty-four years Salomon, Milton Agronomy LD5655.V855 1938.S246 Crop rotation -- Virginia -- Blacksburg Fertilizers In a large part of the soil fertility studies that have been attempted in the past, a great number of the results obtained were based almost entirely on crop yields. These yields were used as the final criterion upon which to draw conclusions as to whether a given system of soil management was a profitable one. At the Virginia Agricultural Experiment Station, Blacksburg, Virginia, a series of rotation and continuous cropping experiments have been undergoing a specified treatment for a period of 24 years. Conclusions as to the expediency of the practices followed have been approached from a purely crop yield basis. This method is serving its purpose in showing exactly how much the land is producing at the present time under a given soil management practice. It is believed, however, that a soil management program goes further than this. A practice based on crop production alone may prove, over a long period of time, to be a poor one. Perhaps just as important are the conditions arising within the soil relating to these practices. Whether or not the system evolved is one of soil building rather than one of soil depletion, is a question which necessarily must be considered before any recommendation as to the soil management practices to be followed, may be attempted. Master of Science 2015-06-26T20:54:21Z 2015-06-26T20:54:21Z 1938 Thesis Text http://hdl.handle.net/10919/53742 en_US OCLC# 29947943 In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ (various paging) application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Agricultural and Mechanical College and Polytechnic Institute
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language en_US
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic LD5655.V855 1938.S246
Crop rotation -- Virginia -- Blacksburg
Fertilizers
spellingShingle LD5655.V855 1938.S246
Crop rotation -- Virginia -- Blacksburg
Fertilizers
Salomon, Milton
The effect of different fertilizer treatments on the nitrogen and organic matter content of a soil when cropped to a definite rotation for a period of twenty-four years
description In a large part of the soil fertility studies that have been attempted in the past, a great number of the results obtained were based almost entirely on crop yields. These yields were used as the final criterion upon which to draw conclusions as to whether a given system of soil management was a profitable one. At the Virginia Agricultural Experiment Station, Blacksburg, Virginia, a series of rotation and continuous cropping experiments have been undergoing a specified treatment for a period of 24 years. Conclusions as to the expediency of the practices followed have been approached from a purely crop yield basis. This method is serving its purpose in showing exactly how much the land is producing at the present time under a given soil management practice. It is believed, however, that a soil management program goes further than this. A practice based on crop production alone may prove, over a long period of time, to be a poor one. Perhaps just as important are the conditions arising within the soil relating to these practices. Whether or not the system evolved is one of soil building rather than one of soil depletion, is a question which necessarily must be considered before any recommendation as to the soil management practices to be followed, may be attempted. === Master of Science
author2 Agronomy
author_facet Agronomy
Salomon, Milton
author Salomon, Milton
author_sort Salomon, Milton
title The effect of different fertilizer treatments on the nitrogen and organic matter content of a soil when cropped to a definite rotation for a period of twenty-four years
title_short The effect of different fertilizer treatments on the nitrogen and organic matter content of a soil when cropped to a definite rotation for a period of twenty-four years
title_full The effect of different fertilizer treatments on the nitrogen and organic matter content of a soil when cropped to a definite rotation for a period of twenty-four years
title_fullStr The effect of different fertilizer treatments on the nitrogen and organic matter content of a soil when cropped to a definite rotation for a period of twenty-four years
title_full_unstemmed The effect of different fertilizer treatments on the nitrogen and organic matter content of a soil when cropped to a definite rotation for a period of twenty-four years
title_sort effect of different fertilizer treatments on the nitrogen and organic matter content of a soil when cropped to a definite rotation for a period of twenty-four years
publisher Virginia Agricultural and Mechanical College and Polytechnic Institute
publishDate 2015
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/53742
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