UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE
(2) DEPARTMENT BULLETIN No. 1419
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Washington, D. C.
October, 1926
FACTORS AND PROBLEMS « ... orLECTION OF PEAT LANDS FOR
DIFFERENT USES
By ALrrED P. DacuENoOWsKI, Associate Physiologist, Office of Soil Bacteriology,
Bureau of Plant Industry
TONTENTS
introduction... ._______. _
Examination of peat lands. ___.___..o...___
Selection of peat lands for economic uses.___
Chief differences between layers of peat__._.
Effect of structural features of peat lands..__.
oe
The water table and its effects. ......___
Effects of the mineral substratum._.____.____
SUMMATY ae cece meen emma
Literature cited._
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2:
INTRODUCTION
It is estimated that approximately 79,000,000 of the 113,537,000
acres of wet land in the United States are of potential economic
importance.! The question whether the utilization of these peat
lands is economically practicable is of special interest in the States
bordering the Great Lakes and those on the Gulf Coastal Plain, and
the rest of the country, concerned with the growing needs of a grow-
ing population, is showing an increasing interest in the problem.
For an economically sound solution of the problem, agriculture and
other industry must have a fuller knowledge of the nature of the peat
lands and must deal with them according to that knowledge. It is
essential that the problem be seen as a whole, or at least broadly, so
that the relationship among the various conditions and factors which
must be coordinated and controlled in the future utilization of the
peat lands may be understood.
Just what type of peat area shall be used is often more important
than the choice of the surface material. It is equally clear that in
any particular case the selection depends upon several factors, among
which the general economic considerations taken int. .ccount are
frequently only the more obvious ones. On the viii hand, the
profile features of the peat area, the stage of disint. gration of the
+ The acreage of peat land was much larger at an earlier time, but with the settlement of the States
many extensive areas of shallow peat that were long under cultivation have now disappeared. Only black-
colored mineral soils with a high humus content remain to-day to suggest the former locations of such
Areas.
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