Thursday, May 6, 2021
Monday, April 19, 2021
Soil Chromatography!
So I mixed up all the materials and ingredients for soil chromatography- which you are all going to do this week!
What is Chromatography?
Chromatography understands the soil as a being alive, in other words it is an unfinished process with elements working and living in symbiosis. Therefore the final result is a qualitative view of these processes and elements rather than a quantative one.
Chromatography gives you valuable information such as soil structure, general health of soil, minerals available for the plant, biological diversity, or organic matter content and humus available. It also assess the fertility of the soil through the integration of previous elements.
This is a photographic process using capillary action to make beautiful abstract images which are also science information communication telling us about whats in the soil, and how healthy it is. The main ingredient after soil, water and paper is the Silver Nitrate we use as a sensitiser to make these images.
Some Fun Silver Nitrate (AgNO3) Facts:
Silver Nitrate is used...
- to test the exact salinity of Sea Water. (it’s about 35 grams per Liter, by the way…)
- in Oil Fields to determine the amount of Chloride ions in water and drilling fluids.
- in pharmaceuticals and treating skin and flesh wounds
- to prevent premature shrinking/ dropping of buds & blooms, in cut flowers. (2.83% solution)
- to inhibit cut flowers from making ethylene, which causes them to ripen
- as a stain for proteins and nucleic acids in microscopy
- as a glaze for ceramics (Raku and silver wash)
- as a colourant in glass (blues and purples)
- and
- As a sensitiser in Photography!
Analysis of the Chromatogram or Chroma
The analysis of the final chromatogram - the filter paper - seems more difficult.
Comparison between before and after, different locations, may be easier than to pin-point exactly what is producing the patterns.
The different colours we obtain has to be a reflection of the chemical reaction with silver nitrate and whatever compound that is deposited there.
| this was from sample 1 it reminds me of a tree stump or a turkey tail fungi. What do the ones you've made remind you of? |
The general rule thumb:
- the more complex the pattern the more organic the soil
- the less complex the pattern the less organic the soil
- channels and spikes are a good indication of organic material
- deep strong colours also indicate richer healthier soil
Pfeiffer's Criteria for Evaluation of Chromatograms |
these below are ones i didn't absorb the dirty water long enough and i tried to use different solvents to extract the materials from the soil. I like some of the different things that came from these material experiments- while they might not be as good for the science communication they sure are pretty! This is a great way that science and art overlap- there's a lot of *Experimentation* testing things out, trying different things looking for a result.
Monday, April 12, 2021
Soil Sample Swabs!
Ms. Stewart Sent me some photos of the soil samples!
I'm looking forward to seeing yours!
Make sure to do a blog post about collecting the soil and about your swab discs!
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| fungus. Hoping it’ll get furrier. |






