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China's Sorrow
Before moving on to It was During my agricultural exploration into the regions of Here in a channel fully 40 to 50 feet above the plain of the great delta lay the river known for thousands of years as “ Millions of Chinese farmers with bare hands and baskets had built here through thousands of years a stupendous monument to human cooperation and the will to survive. Since the days of Ta-Yu, nearly 4,000 years ago, the battle of floods with this tremendous river have been lost and won time and again. But why should this battle with the river have to be endless? Any relaxation of vigilance let the river break over its dikes, calling for Herculean and cooperative work to put the river back again in its channel. Then suddenly it dawned upon me that the river was brown with silt, heavily laden with soil that was washed out of the highlands of the vast drainage system of the As its flood waters reached the gentler slope of the delta (1 foot to the mile), the current slowed down and began to drop its load of silt. Deposits of silt in turn lessened the capacity of the channel to carry floodwaters and called on the farmers threatened with angry floods to build the dikes yet higher and higher, year after year. There was no end to this demand of the river if it were to be confined between its dikes. Final control of the river so heavily laden with silt was hopeless; yet millions of farmers toiled on. In 1852, the yellow-brown waters of the This time the river broke its dikes near Silt-silt-silt! We determined to learn where this silt came from, even up to the headwaters. In a series of carefully planned agricultural explorations we discovered the source of the silt that brought ruin to millions of farmers in the plains. In the Without a basis of comparison, we might easily have misread the record as written there on the land. But temple forests, preserved and protected by the Buddhist priests, gave me and my Chinese associates a remarkable chance to measure and compare rates of erosion within these forests and on similar slopes and soils that had been cleared and cultivated. In brief, my Chinese scientific associates and I carried out a series of soil erosion experiments during rainy seasons of 3 years. In these experiments we measured the rate of runoff and erosion by means of runoff plots within temple forests, out on farm fields under cultivation, and on field abandoned because of erosion. Here too, we found how the It was clear that if the farmers of the delta plain were ever to be safeguarded from the mounting perils of the silt laden Farther west in the midst of the famous and vast loessial deposits of North China, we found in the Province of Shansi that an irrigation system first established in 246 B.C. had been put out to use by silt. Here again silt was the villain. We sought out the origin of the silt that had brought an end to an irrigation project that had fed the sons of Han during the Golden Age of China. This origin was found in areas where soil erosion had eaten out gullies 600 feet deep. It was while contemplating such scenes that I resolved to challenge the conclusions of the great German geologist, Baron Von Richthofen, and of Ellsworth Huntington that the decadence of North China was due to desiccation or pulsations of the climate. It was in the presence of such tragic scenes on a gigantic scale that I resolved to run down the nature of soil erosion and to devote my lifetime to study of ways to conserve the lands on which mankind depends. |
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© 2010 Johnston County Government
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