Search CBS42.com
Home News Weather Sports Traffic Contests Features Links Wake Up Alabama Home & Garden Jeopardy EXP CBS 42
 
Growing Greener Lawns by Charles Daniel
CBS 42 News
For homeowner David Feschuk the challenge is keeping his lawn green through a long drought.
For the forest service, it’s bringing back a scorched mountainside after a devastating wildfire. Now, a new kind of soil technology offers solutions for both.
Now soil scientists in Wisconsin have developed a way to turn office waste into a product that can stabilize the soil.
Recycled paper is dried and combined with chemically made polymers and other ingredients.
When mixed with soil, the ingredients are attracted together—like a magnet—creating a net. Industrial engineer Mike Krysiak calls it a-s-t… advanced soil technology.
Dropped by aircraft, the product, called PAM 12 is now being used by the forest service to stabilize burn areas.
Researchers say that same technology is used in soil-binding lawn products that don’t wash away, and won’t damage the environment.
They’ve even developed a new kind of seed watering technology that actually tells you when it needs watering.
It’s new technology designed to reduce paper waste, save water, restore burned hillsides and make your world a little greener.
WHAT IS ADVANCED SOIL TECHNOLOGY? AST is the term used for the product that helps stabilize fire-ravaged soil against erosion. It consists of polymers encased in recycled paper which bond to positive ions in the soil. This process forms clumps, breaking up the hard surface that can form following a fire. This promotes the absorption of water, stopping rain from flushing away soil. This process promotes the plant growth that will hold topsoil in place for the long term.
RUNNING WILD: Weather is a key factor in starting and spreading wildfires -- particularly drought, which dries out vegetation. Trees, underbrush, dry grassy fields, pine needles, dry leaves and twigs can all cause and spread forest fires because they burn faster, like kindling, than large logs or stumps. The more fuel that is present, the more intensely the fire will burn and the faster it will spread. When the fuel is very dry, such as after a long drought, it is consumed much faster, and the fire is much more difficult to contain. As the fire spreads, it generates heat that evaporates the moisture in potential fuel materials just beyond it, making it easier for those to ignite. Wind can also help spread a forest fire, and is the most unpredictable factor. Winds supply the fire with extra oxygen and push it across the land at a faster rate. Because the wind generally flows uphill, fires also travel faster up a slope than downhill. Wildfires can even generate their own winds, called fire whirls, which resemble tornados. They arise from the vortices created by the fire's heat, and can be so strong they have been known to hurl flaming logs and burning debris over long distances.
The American Geophysical Union contributed to the information contained in the TV portion of this report with support from the Camille and Henry Dreyfus Foundation, Inc.

 

  +More News
   National News
   World News

 

 
 
   Local News