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The Field Report
page 6
EXPOSING THE DIRT DOOCTOR
THOSE VOLCANIC ROCK POWDERS
The "Dirt Doctor" has been
recommending "volcanic rock powders" for amending alkaline clay soils
since at least January of 1993. His reasons for doing so have been many
and varied. But, at one time or another, he has claimed that "volcanic
rock powders" provide plant nutrients and have high cation exchange
capacity, water retention capability, and "paramagnetic energy."
As recently as August 19 and 23, 2002,
he devoted his two-minute radio spot to extolling the virtues of rocks
and rock powders, repeating these claims and saying that any kind of
non-native rock would improve the soil, but that "volcanic rocks, like
lava sand, granite sand, zeolite, and basalt, are the best." And he
added a "free" plug for a product called "Earth's Fortune" (more on this
below).
At one time or another in the past, he
has also recommended the use of azomite, greensand, schist, diatomaceous
earth, and glacial rock powder as "volcanic rock powders."
Laying all claims of potential
benefits aside, only 3 of these 9 recommended materials are actually
associated with volcanic activity. But, since another one began life as
a molten material in the subsurface, we’ll grant him that one, too. That
means we will allow lava sand, azomite, granite sand, and basalt to be
classed as "volcanic rock powders." But zeolite, greensand, schist,
diatomaceous earth, and glacial rock powder are, by no stretch of the
imagination, volcanic in origin, so let’s examine each of those -- and
have a look at Azomite.
And let's also have a look at Ironite®,
a falsely maligned gardening product the "Doctor of Dirt" vehemently
opposes, and at Earth's Fortune®, a newer product he added to his
recommended list when it became one of his radio sponsors in September
of 2001.
ZEOLITE,
commonly used as an absorbent in cat litter and other products, is a
large family of secondary minerals composed of hydrated silicates with
varying amounts of aluminum, calcium, potassium, and sodium. As any
mineralogist can tell you, natural zeolites originate from the
post-depositional, chemical alteration of both igneous and sedimentary
rocks. Others are man-made and are manufactured from silicate minerals,
such as glauconite (greensand).
Curiously, Howard Garrett, the "Dirt
Doctor," has said that adding zeolite to a compost heap will prevent
nitrogen gas from escaping. Unless he was talking about a sealed bag of
artificial, man-made zeolite, he failed to explain how this material,
after laying around for thousands, if not millions of years, isn’t
already completely saturated with nitrogen. And he didn’t explain where
that nitrogen gas was escaping to or why it's escape should be of any
concern to us. After all, plain old air is about 78 percent nitrogen.
Of course, this is the same "Dirt
Doctor" who said on March 6, 1999, "Zeolite resulted from ash blown out
of volcanoes all over Texas." And, on February 10, 2002, he said, "Zeolite
was created when volcanoes blew their tops."
Again, in the March, 2002 issue of
The Dirt Doctor's Dirt, he confirmed this mistaken belief when he
wrote, "Zeolite is a natural volcanic mineral. It contains a wide
array of basic minerals that were spewed back to the earth's surface in
a cataclysmic event -- a volcanic eruption."
Then, during his radio program on
January 4, 2004, he demonstrated both his ignorance and his guile by
recommending zeolite to "detox" a soil (whatever that is supposed to
mean) containing Osmocote as a fertilizer. He specifically recommended
a product that comes from a hot springs location so that "all the
calcium and other contaminants have been removed."
GREENSAND is
the name geologists give to any marine (ocean) sediment -- sand, silt,
or shale -- containing significant amounts of glauconite, a
green-colored mineral closely related to micas and clays and essentially
a hydrous potassium silicate. Glauconite forms with the chemical
alteration of biotite mica in shallow water under reducing
(non-oxidizing) conditions, especially in sandstones. Despite these
well known geological facts, the "Dirt Doctor" claims, "Greensand is the
waste material of small marine animals that lived in the shallow water
that used to cover Texas." And he claims that it contains a significant
amount of organic matter.
New Jersey greensand has been mined
for use as a slow-acting agricultural fertilizer for at least 75 years,
with recommended application rates of from 450 to 1,900 lbs. per 1,000
square feet. However, Texas greensand (from both East and South Central
Texas) is of such low quality as a fertilizer (University of Texas
Bulletin 3232, page 554) that mining it was never commercially feasible
until the "Dirt Doctor" began recommending it to gardeners, supposedly
because of its iron content. Sadly, the gullible gardeners who purchase
this product are not told that almost all of that iron is in the inert,
insoluble, ferric form, Fe2O3.
The "Dirt Doctor" claims all the
credit for bringing this "new" product to market. Judging from the
manner in which he promotes its use, "credit" may not be all he receives
from sales of Texas greensand.
Typical of his overdone, even absurd
promotion of this product is the statement he made with respect to its
use on lawn grass during his call-in radio program August 26, 2000:
"Texas greensand will help green things up as fast as anything. Then he
added, "There's a lot of organic matter in Texas greensand," a claim he
continued to make as late as May 25, 2003, when he added the non
sequitur, "Texas greensand has several trace minerals in it and,
because of the organic matter in it, they're available right away."
He added to his inanities in the
October, 2000, issue of The Dirt Doctor's Dirt, when he wrote,
"Texas greensand is one of the best quick green-up agents available. And
it builds the health of the soil."
The nutrient most responsible for
"greening up" any plant is nitrogen, as most gardeners know. But, since
most of the iron in Texas greensand is in an insoluble form, the only
active nutrients of any consequence are potassium and magnesium, as the
following analysis of a sample of glauconite shows.
Potassium 5.49 %
6.62 % K2O
Sodium 0.27 % 0.36 % Na2O
Magnesium 2.28 % 3.78 % MgO
Aluminum 1.90 % 3.58 % Al2O3
Iron 19.62 % 3.37 % FeO and
24.31 % Fe2O3
Silicon 25.00 % 53.48 %
SiO2
Hydrogen 0.47 % 4.22
% H2O of Hydration
Oxygen 44.97 %
For complete technical descriptions
and other information, have a look at
Greensand.
SCHIST is a
very hard, medium to course-grained, finely banded, metamorphic rock,
containing abundant mica minerals. It results from the alteration of
igneous and sedimentary rocks by heat and pressure. (Slate and marble
are other common metamorphic rocks.)
DIATOMACEOUS EARTH
is a salt water or fresh water deposit of the silicon dioxide
exoskeletons (frustules) of golden algae, known as diatoms.
(For general interest and information,
the algae bloom responsible for large fish kills during recent summers
in an increasing number of lakes in north and west central Texas is a
golden algae; that is, a diatom.)
The "Dirt Doctor" seems to be aware of
the origin of DE most of the time. But, occasionally, he claims that
diatomaceous earth is a volcanic dust. And, almost as ludicrous, he has
said that the limestone chalk comprising the white cliffs of Dover is
diatomaceous earth. For more detailed information on this subject,
visit
DE and the Dirt Doc.)
GLACIAL ROCK POWDER
is a product not normally sold in north central Texas -- fortunately.
It comes from the San Gabriel Mountains of California and is essentially
limestone scrapings or rubble left behind by melting glaciers. Andrew
Lopez, the self-titled "Invisible Gardener" and the Pacific Palisades
version of the "Dirt Doctor," is fond of this product and may well be
the guru Howard Garrett got his idea from.
AZOMITE is
indeed of volcanic origin and is, therefore, a "volcanic rock powder."
But it's worthy of discussion for other reasons.
Azomite is a made-up name (A
to Z Of Minerals
Including Trace
Elements) given by a man named Rollin Anderson to a
large deposit of smectite (montmorillonite) clay located south of Salt
Lake City, Utah. As named and promoted by Anderson, this is a volcanic
ash that just so happens to be the same clay mineral -- from the same
type of source -- as the clay which permeates the soils of the Texas
Blackland Prairie.
No informed person would ever
recommend adding azomite to these clay-based soils. But the "Dirt
Doctor" did. His reasons for doing so -- and the original, absurd, even
laughable claims made in behalf of azomite -- can be found in Chapter 17
of the self-described New Age book, Secrets of the Soil, by Peter
Thompkins and Christopher Bird (Harper & Row, 1989). (This book is now
available from
Acres
USA.)
More recently, Peak Minerals--Azomite,
of Branson, Missouri, obtained mining rights to the Rollin Anderson site
and are selling azomite for use as a fertilizer and as an anti-caking
agent for animal feed. As a fertilizer, they recommend using 100 to 600
lbs/acre on the farm and 1 to 2 lbs/10 sq. ft. in the garden. Notice
the discrepancy. The garden rate translates to 4,356 to 8,712
lbs/acre. And the farm rate translates to only 0.023 to 0.138 lbs/10
sq. ft. Why in the world would there be such a difference? Unless,
maybe, somebody flunked arithmetic in elementary school.
This azomite product is something they
(Peak Minerals) label as a hydrated sodium calcium aluminosilicate
"formed from the dust of a volcano." As such, it would appear to be
the same smectite clay as before. But then they describe their product
as a "rhyolitic tuff breccia" and say that it is sold as a "very dusty,
fine, free-floating powder" that has a specific gravity of 0.75 and is
less than one percent soluble in water. (This can all be viewed at
their
website,
and I especially invite my geologist friends to have a look.)
For non-geologists, here is a
translation of the rock description in the previous paragraph. Rhyolite
is, by definition, basically the same mixture of minerals as granite but
with grains or crystals too small to be seen with the naked eye. Tuff
is compacted volcanic fragments (rhyolite fragments, in this case, I
suppose) that are very small, generally less than 4 mm (about 1/6th of
an inch) in size. And breccia is a conglomeration of sharp-edged,
pebble-size or larger rocks (tuff, in this case, I suppose).
These descriptions just don't hang
together, especially considering that they also label azomite simply as
an aluminosilicate. And the chemical equation they give for it on their
website is, more or less, that of a smectite clay, the same mineral as
the original azomite. Oh, well. You've got to keep an escape route
handy if you're going to stay in the snake oil business for very long.
* * * *
Finally, since the clay in the soils
of the Texas Blackland Prairie began life as volcanic ash, the "Dirt
Doctor" really should explain why he consistently and continually
recommends adding even more of these so-called "volcanic rock powders."
* * * *
IRONITE® is a commercial
product that consists, basically, of soluble iron sulfate, plus a little
added nitrogen. The "Dirt Doctor" had the following to say about it on
his radio program of June 17, 2001.
"Ironite is a product I don't
recommend," he said, "because it has awfully high levels of arsenic and
lead. The Ironite people say they aren't available because they're in
the galena form. But, if that's the case, the iron isn't available
either."
It is true that Ironite® contains galena,
which is lead sulfide (PbS). It also contains arsenic, not as galena,
but in the form of arsenopyrite (ferro-arsenic sulfide, FeAsS)
encapsulated in pyrite (iron sulfide, FeS). Tests conducted by the
University of Colorado-Boulder and Inter Ag Services, Inc. showed that
Ironite® contains these minerals in a concentration of less than one
percent. Furthermore, the arsenic had a phytoavailability in a clay
soil of 0.00095%; whereas, the native arsenic content of the soil had a
phytoavailability of 0.026%, more than 27 times as great. ("Phytoavailability"
means "availability to plants.")
According to Will Humble, office chief
for the Arizona Department of Health Services, "The results of our risk
assessment report found that prolonged use of Ironite® does not
represent a health risk to residents when applied as recommended on the
label." Furthermore, according to the U. S. Environmental Protection
Agency and State of Washington LD50 testing methods in which the
prescribed maximum dose of Ironite® was fed to laboratory rats, Ironite®
is not considered toxic if accidentally ingested. As a matter of fact,
Ironite® was found to be safer than common table salt in that regard.
Of course, this might all be considered
irrelevant when it's remembered that the "Dirt Doctor" strongly
recommends the use of compost because "it contains all 92 mineral
elements." And that must certainly include arsenic and lead, as well as
cadmium, chromium, copper, plutonium, uranium, etc., etc., etc. (He
also recommends a product called Earth's Fortune®, as you can see
below.)
On the other hand, his statement that if
the arsenic and lead in Ironite® aren't available then the iron isn't
either is simply ignorant and demonstrates once more his continuing lack
of knowledge of anything chemical.
And here's something for those gentle
visitors who believe that, just because something evil is present, it
must be dangerous. The fine crystal goblet you drank that merlot from
makes that nice ringing sound because of the lead in the glass. And the
pretty green bottle that wonderful Mateus wine rests in has that color
because of the combined copper and arsenic in the glass.
And we won't even mention all the gallium
arsenide in that cell phone you rub against the side of your head.
EARTH'S FORTUNE®
The "Dirt Doctor" began touting this
product, formerly known as Nature Gro, on his call-in radio program on
Sunday, September 23, 2001, when he welcomed it as a sponsor and
described it as a mixture of humus and volcanic ash. (On June 23, 2002,
he described it as "half humus and half volcanic rock." Then, on July
28, 2002, he described it as "talcum-powder sized lava sand" and humate.)
But, even though the website for this
Farmington, New Mexico, company (www.earthsfortune.com)
describes Earth's Fortune® as coming "straight from the bellies of
ancient volcanoes," it does not specifically mention volcanic ash as a
component. It states only that it is "derived from natural volcanic and
humate deposits" and specifies that its humates are derived from
Leonardite, which is an impure form of lignite coal or shale.
Laying aside any potential benefits for
some types of soils, the interesting thing about this product with
respect to the "Dirt Doctor" and to the soils of the Texas Blackland
Prairie is that he recommends it because he believes that it contains
volcanic ash, which "increases the paramagnetism." But volcanic ash is
the very material already permeating those alkaline clay soils. So,
just as with the Azomite® product discussed earlier, why would anyone
want to add even more?
And one must wonder if the "Dirt Doctor"
looked at the chemical ingredients of Earth's Fortune®, as listed on the
"Mineral Content" page of the company website on September 23, 2001. If
so, he must have decided that it's okay to sell a product with
measurable amounts of arsenic, cadmium, chlorine, chromium, copper,
lead, and uranium, provided you're one of his sponsors -- a paying
customer, so to speak.
OOPS! Sometime
between 9/23/01 and 11/5/01, the Earth's Fortune® website was updated,
and some improvements were made. On the "How It Works" page, it's no
longer claimed that this product is "a micronized powder that plants
absorb easily." Now, it says, more accurately, that it's "a micronized
powder that is readily available to plant roots and microbes."
On the "Testimonials" page, a statement
has been added: "Used and endorsed by the 'Dirt
Doctor,' Howard Garrett, and Dave Owens, 'The Garden Guy' (of the
Phoenix area)." In addition, a testimonial (well worth reading) has
been added from a nursery located in Plano, Texas.
But, most importantly, perhaps, on the
"Mineral Content" page, arsenic, cadmium,
lead, and uranium have mysteriously
disappeared, thereby reducing the number of "Trace Minerals & Nutrients"
from 52 to 48. What could possibly have happened to these four elements
in that six-week interim? Hmmm. I'm glad I saved -- just for the
record -- a hard copy of the original assay.
AUTHORED BY
FIELD ROEBUCK
http://froebuck.home.texas.net/index.htm
EXPOSING
THE DIRT DOCTOR !
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