Inadvertently, Detroit is supplying a wealth of data points
for the investigation of soils. This data
may end up informing ongoing soil research outside of the cities were planning
soil development seriously matters.
What I was taught many long years
ago is that all soils take centuries to somehow accumulate the necessary humus. Thus the loss across the West of several
inches of soil was looked upon as a legitimate calamity and plausibly dangerous. In the end, the loss reflected the change out
of the natural grasses.
I now believe that soils can be
built out in even a generation or so through the judicious use of the right
types of vegetation. The humus is
quickly provided by deep root systems and their related degradation. Amendments encourage that activity as well as
perhaps the addition of biochar were possible to retain nutrients.
Abandoned Detroit
shows how soil develops
Saturday, April 07, 2012
By Mary Makarushka
Urban soils have long presented a challenge to the soil
scientist. Many heavily urbanized sites have been repeatedly excavated,
admixed, cut, filled, and graded over to the point where they look like dirt
and debris mixed up in a blender and pressed with a giant trash compactor. When
there’s seemingly no rhyme or reason to a site, the soils can be difficult to
map and their study may call for some unconventional approaches.
InDetroit ,
however, soil scientist and geologist Jeffrey L. Howard is finding that some of
the city’s vacant lots and demolition do provide a surprising “natural
laboratory” for studying certain processes involved in soil formation,
particularly the weathering of rocky and mineral objects within the soil
layers. Howard has been analyzing soil pits in the heart of the Motor City
since the early 1990s, when he first dug an experimental pit on the site
of a demolished building a few blocks away from his office at Wayne State
University . Despite
the urban setting, he was surprised to notice the similarity between the chunks
of mortar and iron nails weathering there and the rocky and mineral materials
that undergo oxidation, leaching, erosion, and other weathering processes in
naturally occurring soils.
In
But unlike with natural soils, which may develop over thousands of
years, Howard can date the processes in his “natural laboratory” much more
narrowly by digging at sites where a dated cornerstone or other historical
record can tell him exactly how long those processes have been taking place.“With
an urban soil, we know what ‘time zero’ is,” Howard says. “We don’t know that
as well in nature.” If he’s working on a vacant lot where the building was
demolished in 1969, for example, “that’s when the soil started to
form.”Geologically, Detroit is an ancient lakebed atop 15 stories
worth of glacial till, but as a city, its “time zero” begins in 1701, when
Antoine de la Mothe Cadillac secured the area for France by building
Fort Pontchartrain beside the strait joining Lakes Erie and Huron.
Having vast tracts of vacant land is a problem for
This dramatic contraction has left thousands of surplus houses,
abandoned factories, empty office buildings, and crumbling landmarks in its
wake. Though the downtown boasts new casinos and sports arenas, an estimated 40
square miles of city land is now vacant—nearly 30% of the city’s total area—and
every year more buildings are marked for demolition than the city budget can
absorb. Pheasants, opossums, and wild turkeys are reportedly making their homes
in what once were backyards, and the current mayor has set a goal of taking down
10,000 houses during his term.
Soils Display Surprising Order
Having vast tracts of vacant land is a problem for
Then it happened again and again in one pit after another: “I thought,
this can’t be right. I mean, it can’t be this consistent in downtown Detroit .”Using the alphabetical
system that soil scientists use to describe soil layers, or “horizons,”
Howard’s derelict building sites often display an A horizon (the dark,
uppermost layer colloquially called “topsoil”), and below that, in
the subsoils, a C horizon developed in the layer of fill material that was
brought in to help level the site and ready it for future construction.
Under that layer, Howard then typically finds another A and C horizon
of the buried native soil. Finding those orderly layers meant that Howard could
develop an “urban chronosequence”for each site.
A chronosequence is a series of related soils whose properties differ
primarily as a result of age. This proved interesting because while the sites
were consistent in terms of having soil layers, variations in other
factors—such as age, location, precipitation, contaminants, and the amount and
composition of the fill materials—made the layers themselves very different
from site to site.
A Brewster-Douglass pit with some artifacts labelled in it Train Station Soils Yield Interesting ResultsMichigan Central
Station was the city’s main railroad terminal from 1913 on. Built as a Beaux
Arts triumph of marble-walled waiting rooms with grand vaulted ceilings, it was
for 75 years many peoples' first experience of Detroit . Though today its interior is
stripped of every salable material and its 18-story tower is a showcase of
broken windows, it still inspires tremendous civic affection and ambitious
plans for its restoration. In the summer of 2011, Jeff Howard joined Wayne State archaeologist Tom Killion on
a dig in Roosevelt
Park , where acres of
formal gardens once spread like a welcome mat in front of the train station.
A Brewster-Douglass pit with some artifacts labelled in it Train Station Soils Yield Interesting Results
Hundreds of wooden houses from
the 1860s and 1870s were demolished to make way first for
the station and then a few years later, for the park,
and Killion’s class dug numerous test pits in search
of archaeological artifacts, foundation walls, and other landmarks.At
27 cm, the topsoil is extraordinarily thick, extremely dark in color, and dense
with worm casts. More surprising, the first layer of subsoil is colored a deep
red but is not clay. The mystery lessens when the archaeologists uncover a
buried sprinkler system date-stamped “1916.”
“It’s like a tropical soil in terms of probably the amount of water they were putting on it,” Howard says.
“That’s why it’s got this humongous A horizon.” The well-watered site
was full of 19th-centurywrought-iron nails, which oxidized and lent a
rusty color to the subsoil. Many natural soils and subsoils have a reddish
color due to the presence of iron oxides—think of the red clay of Georgia —but
those iron oxides are not the result of rusting nails. The team digs easily
through the disintegrating cement and mortar that has also leached into the
subsoil layers.
Calcium carbonate is present in natural soils, too—particularly in dry
areas, like the American West, where it tends to result from the weathering of
substances like limestone or chalk, not from disintegrating cement, as at these
urban sites. As for the deep black color of the topsoil, Howard is
investigating whether it could be tinted by soot from the coal that once
powered the railroads and heated people’s homes and blackened the city’s stone
facades. That’s why Howard calls these urban soil sites a “natural laboratory.”
“We have a chance to look at weathering processes, which are natural, with a chronosequence that we can really date,” he says. Besides being able to run a clock on natural weathering processes, Howard says, “We’re also looking at weathering reactions involving things that you don’t normally see in soils and we don’t know anything about.” A good example is some peculiar artifacts that come out of the train station site, one of which appears at first to be a lumpy rock about the size of a hand, but at the center of which they discover an iron nail—a wrought-iron nail that has undergone pedocementation.
Iron leached out from it into the soil and then was oxidized, cementing
the sandy soil around the nail. The people who installed the sprinkler system
and tended the garden “manipulated the conditions,” he says. “They didn’t know
that’s what they were doing, but scientifically, now we’re able to see
something that we otherwise wouldn’t have seen. And that’s huge.”
A soil pit near of Michigan Central Station shows a thick topsoil with deep red subsoil due to a combination of saturation from a sprinkler system and 19th century wrought-iron nails, which oxidized and lent a rusty color to the subsoil.
Soil Artifacts May Have Beneficial Effect on Health
Howard’s research also suggests that some of that underground construction debris may actually be having a beneficial effect in certain polluted soils. Detroit’s industrial heritage has left its soils—like those of many cities—contaminated with lead and other heavy metals, from coal burning, smelting, lead paint, and leaded gasoline. Although lead paint and leaded gas have been discontinued and the numbers of children with lead poisoning has been dropping since the 1960s, urban lead contamination remains a public health hazard.
A 2010 report on the Detroit
public school system found that nearly 60% of 39,199 children tested had a
history of lead poisoning (lead levels of 10 micrograms/deciliter of blood or
more). One ongoing source of lead exposure is contaminated particles from
windblown topsoil or demolition dust that can be tracked into homes from yards
and sidewalks and be incorporated into household dust. Moreover, there is a
flourishing urban farm and garden movement in Detroit , with many people eager to grow their
own food. Drifting contaminated soils can settle on the leaves of vegetables
and other plants.
This contamination—and research into possible soil remediation
strategies—is of great concern to Howard. In a paper in Environmental Pollution
in 2011 (with Dorota Olszewska), he noted that both calcium carbonate and iron
oxide—by-products of the weathering of cement and iron nails, respectively—act
as immobilizing agents for lead. They chemically combine with lead and prevent
it from leaching into groundwater or being ingested in dust.“Lead loves
carbonate. Lead loves weathered iron,” Howard says. “Maybe we should be leaving
these artifacts in the soil because maybe it would be beneficial from the
standpoint of immobilizing the lead.
Mary Makarushka writes for Soils Horizon from where this article is adapted.
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