Thank you for visiting SNEWPapers!
Sign up freeNarragansett Herald, Hopkinton Gazette And North Kingstown Courier
Narragansett Pier, Washington County, Rhode Island
What is this article about?
Article discusses the fertilizing benefits of heavy snow cover in Northern and Middle States during January 1877, acting as 'poor man's manure' by depositing ammonia and nitrogen from the atmosphere onto soil, supported by experiments and rain comparisons.
OCR Quality
Full Text
Snow is often called the "poor man's manure;" and if it is true that it has any manural value, the farmer's prospects for the next season are certainly flattering. The body of snow upon the ground in all the Northern and Middle States is very great, and millions of acres of land are covered by it as with a blanket of the whitest wool. It is probable that seldom, perhaps never, has so wide an area of our country been covered as during the month of January, 1877. The question whether snow is capable of affording to lands any of the elements of fertility is one often asked; and in reply, the Boston Journal of Chemistry says that it probably is. The atmosphere holds ammonia and some other nitrogenous products, which are without doubt brought to the soil by snowflakes as well as by rain drops.
Experiments both here and abroad would seem to prove the truth of this conclusion. Rains are not only valuable for the moisture which they supply, but for what they bring to us from the atmosphere. During a thunder storm nitric acid is produced in considerable quantities; and dissolved in the rain drops to a high degree of attenuation, its effects upon soils are highly salutary, as the nitrogen permeates the entire soil.
What sub-type of article is it?
What keywords are associated?
Where did it happen?
Domestic News Details
Primary Location
Northern And Middle States
Event Date
January 1877
Event Details
Snow cover in Northern and Middle States during January 1877 provides fertilizing benefits by depositing ammonia and nitrogenous products from the atmosphere onto soil, similar to rain, enhancing land fertility for farmers.