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fertilizer |
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fertilizerSubstance containing some or all of a range of about 20 chemical elements necessary for healthy plant growth, used to compensate for the deficiencies of poor or depleted soil. Fertilizers may be organic, for example farmyard manure, composts, bonemeal, blood, and fishmeal; or inorganic (synthetic or artificial), in the form of simple compounds, mainly of nitrogen, phosphate, and potash, which have been used on a very much increased scale since 1945. Compounds of nitrogen and phosphorus are of particular importance. Elements in the soil are taken up through the roots of plants in solution, becoming part of the compounds forming the plant. If plants are allowed to die and decompose, these compounds return to the soil as part of a natural cycle, such as the nitrogen cycle. However, when crops are harvested the cycle is interrupted, the nutrients are not returned to the soil and are used up. Fertilizers replace these elements, increasing the yield of crops and enabling the soil to be farmed year after year.
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| In addition to supplying seeds, fertilisers and pesticides, the dealers started extending loans to the farmers at high interest rates. It emphasizes what has been grown and how it has been brought to market and used, rather than the systems and technologies which have been deployed in the growing, although where appropriate it talks about rotations, fertilisers and machinery. Despite the occasional thatch damp-proof course, the water table has risen so that salts and chemical fertilisers are drawn up into the brickwork. |
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