Dirt: truly the ground of our being

Will the loss of food-growing soil become part of a 'perfect storm' that destroys world civilization? UW scientist David Montgomery talks about a basic in providing sustainable lives and lifestyles.

Skagit Valley field

Kent Kammerer

Skagit Valley field

Soil Profile, USDA

Courtesy of Wikimedia Commons

Soil Profile, USDA

The Perfect Storm, by Sebastian Junger, revolved around the theme that once in a while Mother Nature conspires to produce a random set of circumstances so deadly that violent storms result. After a movie by the same name popularized the theme, "the perfect storm" found a place in the American lexicon. It described how the right combination of events could coincide to create monumental damage.

Through the ages there have been other tales about events that could have been perfect storms. The Bible described Armageddon, a place where a set of circumstances would put an end to life on earth. Whether it be written in the New Testament, the predictions of Nostradamus, or legends attributed to Mayan glyphs that forecast when life would be ending on earth, there has been speculation about how various disastrous environmental scenarios would play out.

Most folks take the legends with a grain of salt or believe a perfect storm is an invention of the movie industry. But when University of Washington scientist David Montgomery wrote a book called Dirt, its message made readers begin to think a perfect storm might actually be possible.

Why would a book called Dirt attract so much attention? After all, dirt is just the stuff we expect our vacuum cleaner to pick up and our food to grow in.

The book's success was helped by a huge thumbs-up by the respected newsmagazine The Economist, along with other less familiar science review publications like the Geotimes, Nature, Bioscience, and New Scientist magazines. No one was more surprised than the author that his book was finding readers.

Montgomery is a UW professor of geomorphology, a branch of geology whose research papers aren't written for a popular audience. His entire career has been about reading obscure historical manuscripts and gathering data and soil samples from sites around the world. His motivation was basic research, not a book for public consumption. But Montgomery can write exceptionally well. He has a knack of combining history with data to support conclusions that will surprise you page after page.

The mystery revealed in the book is the rather amazing connection between the loss of dirt and the reasons why some ancient civilizations and cities no longer exist. Dirt: The Erosion of Civilizations (2007) is a highly documented history of how previous civilizations used the land to grow food for survival. The book covers centuries of time and cultures all over the planet. Recorded history affirms that there were civilizations that declined, if not disappeared, due in part to misuse of the land to grow food.

Al Gore's film, which also fits into the 'perfect storm' genre, imagined global warming as the cause of worldwide disaster. He painted a picture that polar ice caps would melt, causing the oceans to rise. Food wouldn't grow because the scorching sun would dry up fresh water, and entire ecosystems would vanish forever. The idea that the future of the earth was in jeopardy was reinforced by growing numbers of scientists and governments worldwide. Yes, we had a problem and could now measure changes in the earth's ecosystems, and those changes were accelerating.

But Gore is no scientist, and his reputation for reliability was affected by dangling chads and rumors that he claimed to have invented the internet. Montgomery, on the other hand, is a highly accredited researcher who brings into focus history which we have chosen to forget.

For many years scientists have been trying get the public and governments to better understand that the earth has a finite amount of everything. Including dirt. Lewis and Clark reported back to Thomas Jefferson that their journey revealed abundance beyond comprehension. Early settlers and land barons saw the land as an endless supply of timber, fish, oil, water, and soil for raising food. We couldn't conceive that we could actually run out of anything, especially the soil where our food grows. As a result we consumed with voracious appetite and often with greed. The earth's soil was considered expendable if money was to be made.

Dirt shows beyond question that the soil that grows the food of the world is rapidly disappearing and has been for centuries. Dirt is overused, washed away, blown away, or covered by the built environment. River valleys that contain our most fertile soils are where we are building warehouses, shopping centers, and massive housing units. Locally, Benaroya saw the cheap land in the Kent valley as the best place for South Center and industrial sites. The fact that small truck farms occupied this fertile land that fed Seattle wasn't, at the time, a significant issue.

To the uninformed the earth appears endlessly bountiful, but unfortunately only a small portion is fertile enough to grow food, and that's where we are destroying the most fertile soil. It is happening at this very moment in the Skagit and Puyallup valleys. The inability to grow food near the highest concentration of people was often a major contributor to an older civilization's decline.

Growing food requires water and the accumulated nutrients of mineral and biological processes. Large corporate farms mechanize cultivation and make heavy use of chemical fertilizers to increase food production. Yields increase, but current analysis suggests that corporate farming isn't sustainable over the long haul unless changes are made. The population is now growing more rapidly than the rate at which we can grow food. Artificially grown foods via hydroponics and other new techniques will help, but will still require necessary nutrients and can never reach the scale necessary to feed the third world.

Combined with soil loss and global warming, the third leg of the perfect storm is the exponential growth in world population. now approaching 7 billion. Montgomery is smart enough not to attempt to predict the future. He notes that 100-year predictions are seldom correct. Hervé Le Bras and Thomas Malthus tried and were wrong. Nor are 50-year predictions much better, but newer statistics on the number of births and longer life spans due to better medicine leave us with some serious questions.

With the world population growing by approximately 80 million each year, our current use of land and resources suggests that our standard of living may not be sustainable. It's not just because of global warming, or the buildup of CO2, or the declining amount of potable water, or a finite amount of oil. It's because the world population by most estimates will increase by another billion by 2050.

At that point human beings will require 70% more food worldwide than we now produce. By the time our population reaches 14 billion, even if every environmental policy now under consideration were in use, supplies of food, water, fuel, and natural resources will be nearly gone. Unless major changes are made in population control and in how we use the earth, a child born today might, theoretically, see mass starvation by the end of the century.

There are those who believe that global warming is a myth and that the world population will never reach these numbers. If true, we have nothing to worry about. But the movement of millions of the world's population from rural areas into the cities for jobs to make tennis shoes and new electronic games has meant that those same people would no longer grow their own food in those rural areas.


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Comments:

Posted Thu, Mar 10, 9:34 a.m. Inappropriate

Dirt, worth more than gold.

The other book on the same subject is Jarrad's "Collapse" both books focus on civilizations that died because of overuse of their natural resources. Dirt is more optimistic because in addition to explaining what's wrong, it also gives us some ideas on how to fix it. The best idea is that it turns out organic farming also locks up atmospheric CO2 thus fixing both the soil problem and the climate change problem. It doesn't address the fact that organic farming is labor intensive as it doesn't address the change in the labor force and the increase in cost of food.

The trick is to value food producing land at a higher value than it's currently at. If that were the case, we'd see those warehouses and houses in the Green River valley removed, and the Howard Hanson dam gone as well. Flooding restores some of the lost nutrients from farming.

Still we may have a food supply crisis before we act on what we know we have to do. The rising cost of fuel may also drive some of this as it won't be economical to transport food 10,000 miles vs farming locally.

GaryP

Posted Thu, Mar 10, 12:34 p.m. Inappropriate

Good piece, Kent. I plan to read the book. One comment: the "no-till" procedures that I am somewhat familiar with does require a lot of herbicide and it is difficult to keep the highly developed seed stock from becoming contaminated with invasive species.

kieth

Posted Thu, Mar 10, 1:04 p.m. Inappropriate

@ Kieth: According to the Land Institute and founder Wes Jackson, the organic polyculture farming of perennial foods requires little or no tilling of the soil, eliminates the need for herbicides, and wards off invasives by dominating the field all year. http://crosscut.com/2010/12/08/agriculture/20428/Learning-to-reap-crops-without-raping-the-land/

Posted Thu, Mar 10, 2:09 p.m. Inappropriate

There is an interesting documentary on an organic farmer called "The truth about Farmer John". Netflix had it last time I looked, and I bet Amazon sells it. Shows the amount of labor and talks a lot about Organic farming.

I also recently heard that farming is a negative energy output. It used to be a positive output but with fossil fuel fertilizers and diesel fuel tractors the sum of the energy output is negative.

GaryP

Posted Thu, Mar 10, 2:11 p.m. Inappropriate

Today's Seattle Times imagines a time when city dwellers will stop jetting the world and stay home to milk a goat "night and day" and collect duck eggs, in return for feed and full time care. A letter was published yesterday that suggested dealing with the growing p-patch waiting list and shrinking allotment sizes by farming more yards, or those of neighbors, e.g. the new Victory Garden.

This tilting at new fashioned windmills would be outright amusing if the situation were not as dire as Montgomery and numerous other authors point out. At least it would be to those who have learned that caring for plants and semi-wild animals is not something done on a lark or on a roof, let alone attempting full self-reliance.

Steadfast vegetable farmers like Steve Solomon sheepishly revise advice to others. Solomon's "Growing Vegetables West of the Cascades," in its 6th Edition, is full of "forget thats" regarding advice espoused in previous editions. His title has always held an important clue—notions don't work the same everywhere and it takes a lot of time to learn the differences. Time we may well not have.

The most troubling aspect of it all is the double bind espoused even by progressives who are no spring chickens— live in a highrise, farm the roof—save the planet. Like Solomon, it's OK to guess wrong, but to not see it is their own double bind that contributes to those with modest means being driven onto land best suited for farming amounts to the solution being the problem. We can no longer afford that.

For more practical activity, see Shop Class as Soulcraft—an Inquiry into the Value of Work; Why Your World is About to Get Whole Lot Smaller; Life, Money, and Illusions; Ecological Futures, The Sustainability Mirage; Planet of Slums; No Man's Garden; The Bridge at the Edge of the World, and The Long Haul.

afreeman

Posted Thu, Mar 10, 7:09 p.m. Inappropriate

"But Gore is no scientist, and his reputation for reliability was affected by dangling chads and rumors that he claimed to have invented the internet. Montgomery, on the other hand, is a highly accredited researcher who brings into focus history which we have chosen to forget."

That's not really a problem. If Prof. Montgomery threatens to reduce the quarterly results of any corporations that matter (and who else does, after all, really does?) I'm sure Mr. Kammerer will be able to say the same thing when he introduces the next doomed attempt to get us to pay attention to reality.

Here we go:

"But Montgomery is no xxx, and his reputation for yyy was affected by . Mr NewAndAsYetUnnoticed, on the other hand, is a who has written some sort of reality-based screed which I'm pretending to care about"

There Kent - there's your key paragraph in a piece you'll write in five or ten years years... :-)

Posted Sat, Mar 12, 8:28 a.m. Inappropriate

But Montgomery is a scientist, and winner of a MacArthur grant to boot!

More likely you'll read:

"Montgomery, winner of a Nobel prize for XXX, in his book warned the people of the world about the loss of topsoil and averted world wide famines as his techniques were adopted by farmers just in time."

"JustThisGuy", you should read the book, it lays out the facts and observations in a highly digestible way. No need to worry about quarterly corporate profits, as with the coming loss of topsoil, there will be plenty of money to be made by those who still have some.

GaryP

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