翻开草皮:人类、历史与土壤。

Breaking the sod: humankind, history, and soil.

作者信息

McNeill J R, Winiwarter Verena

机构信息

Edmund A. Walsh School of Foreign Service, Intercultural Center 600, Box 571035, Georgetown University, 3700 O Street, N.W., Washington, DC 20057-1035, USA.

出版信息

Science. 2004 Jun 11;304(5677):1627-9. doi: 10.1126/science.1099893.

Abstract

For most of history, few things have mattered more to human communities than their relations with soil, because soil provided most of their food and nutrients. Accordingly, some of the earliest written documents were agricultural manuals intended to organize, preserve, and impart soil knowledge. Indeed, ancient civilizations often worshipped the soil as the foundry of life itself. For the past century or two, nothing has mattered more for soils than their relations with human communities, because human action inadvertently ratcheted up rates of soil erosion and, both intentionally and unintentionally, rerouted nutrient flows.

摘要

在历史的大部分时间里,对于人类社会而言,几乎没有什么比他们与土壤的关系更重要了,因为土壤提供了他们大部分的食物和养分。因此,一些最早的书面文件是旨在整理、保存和传授土壤知识的农业手册。事实上,古代文明常常将土壤奉为生命本身的铸造厂而加以崇拜。在过去的一两个世纪里,对于土壤来说,没有什么比它们与人类社会的关系更重要了,因为人类活动无意中加速了土壤侵蚀的速度,并且有意无意地改变了养分流动的方向。

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