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In the past, soil carbon measurement was done by taking samples from small cores or large excavations back to the lab, Wielopolski said. Now, with his device, we can sample a large volume at the site so that normal lateral fluctuations are smoothed out.
Unlike other soil carbon measurement technologies, which are destructive, Wielopolski's device allows for multi-elemental soil analysis. It can also be used in a scanning mode, allowing scientist to obtain average values of a large area.
The device may be of particular interest to farmers worldwide, who have been switching in increasing number from conventional agricultural methods that turn the soil to what is called no-till farming. Since carbon generally improves soil fertility, it will allow farmers to determine when soil conditions are ideal.
There is another reason the farmers may want to keep track of how much carbon is present in their soils.
Photosynthesis sequesters carbon in the root systems of plants and finally in the soil, Wielopolski said. Switching from till to no-till agricultural increases carbon sequestration and farmers will want to be able to verify the amount of carbon stored. Since carbon sequestration removes carbon from the atmosphere, thus mitigating the global warming, this will allow the farmers to receive carbon credit.
Pursuant to the Kyoto Treaty on reducing greenhouse gas emissions, carbon credits will be available to farmers whose soil contains large amounts of sequestered carbon. Polluting industries are allowed fixed amounts of carbon dioxide emissions, after which they will have to buy carbon credits, now being actively traded on stock exchanges from Europe to Chicago.
The technology is also the subject of a CRADA with the XIA Company of California. In the future, Wielopolski and Mitra look forward to using tagged neutron beams by applying the associated particle neutron time-of-flight technique that could provide vertical profiles as well as the current total carbon in a volume of soil.
It would be a quantum technological jump, Mitra said. I have used this technique to measure carbon in live sheep.
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