Gypsum, sulfur, and sulfuric acid for reclaiming an alkali soil fo the Fresno series
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This paper is a report of recent experiments in the use of gypsum, sulfuric acid, and sulfur in the reclamation of a severely affected alkali soil of the Fresno series. Effects of the soil correctives on the yield of irrigated pasture are compared statistically. Treatment consisted of applications of the chemicals on the basis of the same sulfur content (1.86 tons) per acre. Resulting yields of the sulfuric-acid plots (5.70 tons H/sub 2/SO/sub 4/ per acre) were markedly higher than those of the gypsum (10 tons per acre) and sulfur plots over the two-year period following treatment. Yields of the sulfur plots were never significantly higher than those of the check plots, probably because the sulfur had not had time to oxidize. Yields of the gypsum plots were significantly higher than the sulfur-plot yields for the initial cuttings, but 20 months after application there was no significant difference. Reduced H/sub 2/SO/sub 4/ applications on the same soil (2.85 and 1.42 tons per acre) also gave pronounced beneficial effects. Greenhouse experiments indicate that improvement may be expected from applications as small as 0.4 tons H/sub 2/SO/sub 4/ per acre.
[1] W. P. Kelley. The Formation, Evolution, Reclamation, and the Absorbed Bases of Alkali Soils , 1934, The Journal of Agricultural Science.
[2] C. A. Bower. Availability of Ammonium Fixed in Difficultly Exchangeable Form by Soils of Semiarid Regions1 , 1951 .