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History of Technology Videos 160 videos

History of Technology 1: Windmills
282 Views

What's the deal with wind? And why does it have to be so...windy?

History of Technology 2: Wheels
213 Views

How did people move stuff around before the wheel was invented? More importantly, why didn't they take a break for a few minutes from moving stuff...

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History of Technology 3: Fertile Soil 10 Views


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Description:

How do you get fertile soil? You wait until it ovulates. ...Yeah, we'll see ourselves out.

Language:
English Language

Transcript

00:02

For human purposes not all dirt is good dirt, call us high maintenance, [Piles of dirt with bad, decent and OK signs in them]

00:07

call us needy or just say we have way high standards we humans want our dirt to [Man examines a pile of dirt and celebrates with a fantastic sign]

00:12

be fertile which means it has to have the right combination of things to grow [Man on a motorbike covers man with sign in mud]

00:15

awesome crops. Well fertile soil has to have the right

00:18

nutrients like nitrogen and potassium it also can't be too salty or too acidic [Scientist eats the dirt and spits it out because it is too salty]

00:24

and it has to have good structure so that roots can move around and pick up [Plant grows]

00:28

water finally it needs the right critters and good bacteria, you know kinda [Bacteria underground]

00:33

like a probiotic yogurt though eating any kind of dirt isn't necessarily a good

00:37

option for those in search of probiotics. Well farming the same soil over and over [Tractor driving over soil]

00:42

again depletes it of nutrients and plant food farm a place too hard and it will

00:46

turn to dust don't believe us ask all the folks who lived through the Dust Bowl [People appear out of a dust cloud]

00:51

in the 1930s or don't they're still pretty cranky about that of all the

00:56

factors that affect fertile soil nitrogen is one of the biggest without

01:00

nitrogen plants can't do their plant magic and turn sunshine into food or [Nitrogen atom saying it is one of a kind]

01:04

pull minerals and nutrients out of the dirt so let's figure out where our

01:08

favorite little chemical comes from turns out there's a thing called the

01:12

nitrogen cycle. It's not a motorcycle made of nitrogen though wouldn't that be cool so [Nitrogen atom riding a motorbike in a classroom]

01:18

where does the nitrogen cycle start well nowhere in particular it's a cycle [Hamsters on wheels]

01:22

so there's no beginning and no end and yeah we know deep... Alright we'll start

01:26

talking about poop. Yep the waste of animals and plants decomposes which puts

01:31

Nitrogen into the soil. This is why farmers sometimes intentionally fill

01:36

their fields with manure shockingly enough they don't just enjoy the smell [Farmer shoveling manure into a field]

01:40

Next friendly neighborhood bacteria in the soil converts the plant and animal

01:45

poop into the kind of nitrogen that plants can use plants then binge on the [Bacteria smiling]

01:50

nitrogen in the soil and grow like weeds or like you know whatever kind of plant

01:54

they are. After that people in animals mercilessly eat the plants we're [Strawberry plants growing]

01:59

like vampires. We can't help how we have to feed well [Humans and a monkey run by and destroy the plants]

02:02

after the feeding frenzy animal and plant residues return nitrogen to the

02:06

soil again and the cycle is complete. Well nitrogen from the atmosphere [Rain lands on the soil]

02:10

gets into the soil via rain then atmospheric nitrogen can be

02:15

converted into plant friendly nitrogen by legumes. And no legumes is not

02:21

the French word for various types of bubblegum. Legumes are plants like [Woman in a sweet shop]

02:25

alfalfa, clovers and soybeans. Well now that we've got science we can see how

02:31

nitrogen matters to history. Every new piece of agricultural technology helped [Farmers next a nitrogen atom statue]

02:36

us grow crops or raise critters at least a bit more efficiently. But as a whole

02:41

they haven't always benefitted the nitrogen cycle. Plenty of Agriculture's [Poster of the nitrogen cycle falls to the ground]

02:45

history has been about finding new sources of nitrogen and moving nitrogen

02:50

around in places we need it most there was literally a war over guano aka bat [Men in suits and sunglasses exchange a briefcase and money]

02:56

poop, because guano is so nitrogen rich you know what they say one bat's poop is

03:01

another man's treasure...

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