51bc studies, no. 78, Summer 3
“A Nation of Artists”:
Alice R avenhill and the Society for
the Furtherance of British Columbia
Indian Arts and Crafts
L i Ly n n Wa n *
In 1996, Bill Reid sold a bronze sculpture to the Vancouver International Airport Authority for $3 million, making him the highest-paid Canadian artist to that date. An image of this
sculpture, The Spirit of Haida Gwaii, adorned the Canadian twenty-
dollar bill from 2004 until 2012, and the original casting of the sculpture
stands in front of the Canadian Embassy in Washington, DC. Reid’s
journey to this position as a Haida artist and Canadian icon provides
some insight into the often contradictory role of indigenous imagery in
visual representations of Canadian culture and identity. While Reid’s
work was certainly inspired by his ancestral ties, he learned technique
in a jewellery-making course at the Ryerson Institute of Technology in
Toronto, and he learned the fundamentals of Northwest Coast design
from two books, in particular. One of these books is the American
museum director Robert Bruce Inverarity’s Art of the Northwest Coast
Indians, which was published in 1950; the other is Alice Ravenhill’s
A Corner Stone of Canadian Culture: An Outline of the Arts and Crafts of
the Indian Tribes of British Columbia.1
* Research for this article was funded by the Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council
of Canada. Thanks to Shirley Tillotson and Richard Mackie for invaluable guidance and
editorial advice. And to Rebecca Moy-Behre, who taught me arts and crafts – not as an idea
but as a way of life.
1 Alice Ravenhill, A Corner Stone of Canadian Culture: An Outline of the Arts and Crafts of the
Indian Tribes of British Columbia (Victoria: British Columbia Provincial Museum, 1944).
In Tippett’s interpretation, Reid was consistently ambiguous about his identity for the first
twenty years of his career. His decision to promote himself as an “all Indian” artist did not
come about until the 1970s, after he received a Canada Council fellowship. While Reid had
Haida ancestry and ties to the Haida village of Skidegate, and his great-great-uncle, Charles
Edenshaw, as well as his grandfather, Charles Gladstone, were both Haida artists, his mother
was raised to “become more white and less Haida,” and his father was a “white man” in the
frontier of northern British Columbia in the early twentieth century. See Maria Tippett, Bill
Reid: The Making of An Indian (Toronto: Random House, 2003), 31, 25, 67.
bc studies52
The story of Alice Ravenhill, who spearheaded an arts and crafts
revival in British Columbia in the 1930s, is an important one to tell, and
not only because of her influence on Reid’s career. As Ronald Hawker
has shown, Ravenhill’s work was incorporated into the Indian education
system in both residential and day schools throughout the province.2
By the 1940s, the notion of indigenous peoples being what Ravenhill
described .
An introduction to African American painters and sculptors working in the nineteenth century, including Joshua Johnson, Robert Duncanson, Grafton Tyler Brown, Edward Mitchell Bannister, Edmonia Lewis, and Henry Ossawa Tanner.
1 Chicana Expression—Later 20th Century Public AVannaJoy20
1
Chicana Expression—Later 20th Century
Public Art and the Public Interest1 [Since the 1960s, a number of artists have engaged in
debates] over the nature of public space and the art that is to be placed within this space. In the
past in the United States, public art works often functioned as representations of civic virtues
meant to instill valuable moral lessons. They were also intended to mark the common values of a
diverse community and nation: heroic military efforts in defense of one’s country or one’s
freedoms, respect for the laws of the land. The 1960s changed all that. As people began to march
for civil rights and against the involvement of the United States in the war in Vietnam, many
began to look at public art and ask: “Whose values are being represented? Whose traditions and
beliefs? To whom are these works supposed to speak?” Certainly artists in the 1930s had created
images of working-class Americans in government buildings throughout the country, but those
murals omitted much—the racism directed at African Americans, Native Americans, Latinos and
Asian Americans, the struggles to unionize, the labor of women outside the home. Calls were
issued for a new kind of public art, one that was truly, in the words of the art historian Arlene
Raven, “in the public interest.”
Walls of Pride: Chicano/a Murals These calls were met most effectively by a new generation
of muralists, who began covering walls throughout the country with images of local history or of
the less celebratory side of national history. These artists argued that a public art could only be
truly public if those who shared space with it were consulted about its ultimate form and use. In
California in particular, a new and dynamic movement evolved that took inspiration from both the
murals of Mexico and the struggles of farm workers in the United States, led by Cesar Chavez
and Luisa Moreno, to unionize under the United Farm Workers of America (UFW).
The growing political activism of individuals of Mexican descent around this unionization drive, which
ultimately grew into a full-blown civil rights movement, led to the adoption by many of the name Chicano,
derived from Mexicano. While it had circulated as an informal term for several decades within
communities whose members described themselves as Mexican Americans, it was now used publicly
as a form of positive self-identification, indicative of a new political consciousness and a commitment
to social change. One of the first Chicano murals was produced in 1968 by Antonio Bernal on the side of
the UFW Center in Del Ray, California. The piece celebrates modern revolutionary leaders, including
Pancho Villa, and Emiliano Zapata (key figures in the Mexican Revolution of 1910-20), Cesar Chavez, ,
Malcolm X, and Martin Luther King. A companion piece depicted Pre-Columbian leaders.
Chicana Muralist Judith Baca and The Great Wall of Los An ...
An introduction to African American painters and sculptors working in the nineteenth century, including Joshua Johnson, Robert Duncanson, Grafton Tyler Brown, Edward Mitchell Bannister, Edmonia Lewis, and Henry Ossawa Tanner.
1 Chicana Expression—Later 20th Century Public AVannaJoy20
1
Chicana Expression—Later 20th Century
Public Art and the Public Interest1 [Since the 1960s, a number of artists have engaged in
debates] over the nature of public space and the art that is to be placed within this space. In the
past in the United States, public art works often functioned as representations of civic virtues
meant to instill valuable moral lessons. They were also intended to mark the common values of a
diverse community and nation: heroic military efforts in defense of one’s country or one’s
freedoms, respect for the laws of the land. The 1960s changed all that. As people began to march
for civil rights and against the involvement of the United States in the war in Vietnam, many
began to look at public art and ask: “Whose values are being represented? Whose traditions and
beliefs? To whom are these works supposed to speak?” Certainly artists in the 1930s had created
images of working-class Americans in government buildings throughout the country, but those
murals omitted much—the racism directed at African Americans, Native Americans, Latinos and
Asian Americans, the struggles to unionize, the labor of women outside the home. Calls were
issued for a new kind of public art, one that was truly, in the words of the art historian Arlene
Raven, “in the public interest.”
Walls of Pride: Chicano/a Murals These calls were met most effectively by a new generation
of muralists, who began covering walls throughout the country with images of local history or of
the less celebratory side of national history. These artists argued that a public art could only be
truly public if those who shared space with it were consulted about its ultimate form and use. In
California in particular, a new and dynamic movement evolved that took inspiration from both the
murals of Mexico and the struggles of farm workers in the United States, led by Cesar Chavez
and Luisa Moreno, to unionize under the United Farm Workers of America (UFW).
The growing political activism of individuals of Mexican descent around this unionization drive, which
ultimately grew into a full-blown civil rights movement, led to the adoption by many of the name Chicano,
derived from Mexicano. While it had circulated as an informal term for several decades within
communities whose members described themselves as Mexican Americans, it was now used publicly
as a form of positive self-identification, indicative of a new political consciousness and a commitment
to social change. One of the first Chicano murals was produced in 1968 by Antonio Bernal on the side of
the UFW Center in Del Ray, California. The piece celebrates modern revolutionary leaders, including
Pancho Villa, and Emiliano Zapata (key figures in the Mexican Revolution of 1910-20), Cesar Chavez, ,
Malcolm X, and Martin Luther King. A companion piece depicted Pre-Columbian leaders.
Chicana Muralist Judith Baca and The Great Wall of Los An ...
A presentation on the Research Guide to Jamaican Art I created for Prof. Soehner's Introduction to Art Librarianship class.
This is the first resource guide on this topic.
The Chicago Renaissance turn of 20th c.-1960s(ish)a ga.docxmamanda2
The Chicago Renaissance: turn of 20th c.-1960s(ish)
“a gathering of writers, a flowering of institutions that supported and guided them, and the outpouring of writing they produced”
http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/pages/257.html
*
Chicago in the 1890s—Setting the Stage for the Renaissance
*
Historical significance of the World's Columbian Exposition
The second half of the 19th century was an age of fairs and expositions held in London, Paris, and other great cities throughout the world. The World's Columbian Exposition, held in Chicago in 1893, was the first critically and economically successful U.S. world's fair. Conceived as a celebration of the 400th anniversary of Columbus' landing in the new world, the Exposition held a near-mythological appeal for people of the time.
The Columbian Exposition showcased a city just 60 years old, a city magnificently reborn just 22 years after the Chicago Fire. It also placed before the world the genius of Chicago architects Daniel Burnham, Frederick Law Olmsted, and Louis Sullivan. In effect, the Columbian Exposition was Chicago's debut on a world stage as a locus of great architecture and burgeoning economic power.
http://columbus.gl.iit.edu/index.html
*
"The exterior of the gigantic bubble of glass and iron that rises over the central pavilion of Horticultural Hall has already been shown in these plates, and here we are admitted into the luxurious tropical garden that flourishes in the interior. Here in a great space of light and air may be seen a miniature mountain covered with strange foliage and with a little stream dashing down its sides, great tubs of palms and tree ferns, bamboos, century plants, "elk horns," a miniature Japanese garden, bridges and all, and shady, inviting nooks, in which the tourisht may find picturesque rest - much as the painter has here shown." Art & Architecture (the White City Edition)
*
The Chicago Defender, 1905
The Chicago Defender, which was founded by Robert S. Abbott on May 5, 1905, once heralded itself as "The World's Greatest Weekly." The newspaper was the nation's most influential black weekly newspaper by the advent of World War I, with more than two thirds of its readership base located outside of Chicago.
As a northern paper, The Defender had more freedom to denounce issues outright, and its editorial position was very militant, attacking racial inequities head-on. The Defender did not use the words "Negro" or "black" in its pages. Instead, African Americans were referred to as "the Race" and black men and women as "Race men and Race women.“
During World War I The Chicago Defender waged its most aggressive (and successful) campaign in support of "The Great Migration" movement. This movement resulted in over one and a half million southern blacks migrating to the North between 1915-1925.
*
,
Richard Wright, born 1908
Native Son, 1940
Black Boy, 1945
*
Harriet Monroe and Poetry, 1912
The word "Imagiste" a.
A report writingAt least 5 pagesTitle pageExecutive Su.docxfredharris32
A report writing
At least 5 pages
Title page
Executive Summary
Table of Contents (automated)
Clear Purpose and Problem
Clear Recommendations
Clear plan for implementing those recommendations
References page
easy-to-ready format
pdf so formatting doesn't shift
.
A reflection of how your life has changedevolved as a result of the.docxfredharris32
A reflection of how your life has changed/evolved as a result of the pandemic. The following are general questions to get you going (and to give you an idea of what I’m looking for).
· What has challenged you as a result of COVID-19?
· In what way has it changed your thinking of some of the topics we covered in class – food, gender, race, class, etc.?
· How has this pandemic affected your perspective of food, social media, news, and/or critical thinking (such as evaluating sources/information)?
· In what way has the shift into online learning affected your perspective of education, access to technology, and/or social inequity?
How you answer the above questions (all, a few, or just one) is up to you. In other words, what you say and how you say it, as well as what medium you want to convey the reflection is entirely your choice. The story, nonfiction essay, poem, play, art – these are all viable options in creating your reflection. But more than anything else, reflect on the impact of COVID-19 in a personal way.
2-3 pages
Double-spaced
.
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Similar to 51bc studies, no. 78, Summer 3A Nation of Artists” .docx
A presentation on the Research Guide to Jamaican Art I created for Prof. Soehner's Introduction to Art Librarianship class.
This is the first resource guide on this topic.
The Chicago Renaissance turn of 20th c.-1960s(ish)a ga.docxmamanda2
The Chicago Renaissance: turn of 20th c.-1960s(ish)
“a gathering of writers, a flowering of institutions that supported and guided them, and the outpouring of writing they produced”
http://www.encyclopedia.chicagohistory.org/pages/257.html
*
Chicago in the 1890s—Setting the Stage for the Renaissance
*
Historical significance of the World's Columbian Exposition
The second half of the 19th century was an age of fairs and expositions held in London, Paris, and other great cities throughout the world. The World's Columbian Exposition, held in Chicago in 1893, was the first critically and economically successful U.S. world's fair. Conceived as a celebration of the 400th anniversary of Columbus' landing in the new world, the Exposition held a near-mythological appeal for people of the time.
The Columbian Exposition showcased a city just 60 years old, a city magnificently reborn just 22 years after the Chicago Fire. It also placed before the world the genius of Chicago architects Daniel Burnham, Frederick Law Olmsted, and Louis Sullivan. In effect, the Columbian Exposition was Chicago's debut on a world stage as a locus of great architecture and burgeoning economic power.
http://columbus.gl.iit.edu/index.html
*
"The exterior of the gigantic bubble of glass and iron that rises over the central pavilion of Horticultural Hall has already been shown in these plates, and here we are admitted into the luxurious tropical garden that flourishes in the interior. Here in a great space of light and air may be seen a miniature mountain covered with strange foliage and with a little stream dashing down its sides, great tubs of palms and tree ferns, bamboos, century plants, "elk horns," a miniature Japanese garden, bridges and all, and shady, inviting nooks, in which the tourisht may find picturesque rest - much as the painter has here shown." Art & Architecture (the White City Edition)
*
The Chicago Defender, 1905
The Chicago Defender, which was founded by Robert S. Abbott on May 5, 1905, once heralded itself as "The World's Greatest Weekly." The newspaper was the nation's most influential black weekly newspaper by the advent of World War I, with more than two thirds of its readership base located outside of Chicago.
As a northern paper, The Defender had more freedom to denounce issues outright, and its editorial position was very militant, attacking racial inequities head-on. The Defender did not use the words "Negro" or "black" in its pages. Instead, African Americans were referred to as "the Race" and black men and women as "Race men and Race women.“
During World War I The Chicago Defender waged its most aggressive (and successful) campaign in support of "The Great Migration" movement. This movement resulted in over one and a half million southern blacks migrating to the North between 1915-1925.
*
,
Richard Wright, born 1908
Native Son, 1940
Black Boy, 1945
*
Harriet Monroe and Poetry, 1912
The word "Imagiste" a.
A report writingAt least 5 pagesTitle pageExecutive Su.docxfredharris32
A report writing
At least 5 pages
Title page
Executive Summary
Table of Contents (automated)
Clear Purpose and Problem
Clear Recommendations
Clear plan for implementing those recommendations
References page
easy-to-ready format
pdf so formatting doesn't shift
.
A reflection of how your life has changedevolved as a result of the.docxfredharris32
A reflection of how your life has changed/evolved as a result of the pandemic. The following are general questions to get you going (and to give you an idea of what I’m looking for).
· What has challenged you as a result of COVID-19?
· In what way has it changed your thinking of some of the topics we covered in class – food, gender, race, class, etc.?
· How has this pandemic affected your perspective of food, social media, news, and/or critical thinking (such as evaluating sources/information)?
· In what way has the shift into online learning affected your perspective of education, access to technology, and/or social inequity?
How you answer the above questions (all, a few, or just one) is up to you. In other words, what you say and how you say it, as well as what medium you want to convey the reflection is entirely your choice. The story, nonfiction essay, poem, play, art – these are all viable options in creating your reflection. But more than anything else, reflect on the impact of COVID-19 in a personal way.
2-3 pages
Double-spaced
.
A Princeton University study argues that the preferences of average.docxfredharris32
A Princeton University study argues that "the preferences of average American appear to have only a minuscule, near zero, statistically non-significant impact upon public policy." If that is indeed the case, can we still say that we have strong political institutions in the United States? Does this case pose a threat to our future economic growth?
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A rapidly growing small firm does not have access to sufficient exte.docxfredharris32
A rapidly growing small firm does not have access to sufficient external financing to accommodate its planned growth. Discuss what alternatives the company can consider in order to implement its growth strategy.
How can the firm determine the cost of those alternative sources of capital?
Provide your explanations and definitions in detail and be precise. Comment on your findings. Provide references for content when necessary. Provide your work in detail and explain in your own words. Support your statements with peer-reviewed in-text citation(s) and reference(s).
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A psychiatrist bills for 10 hours of psychotherapy and medication ch.docxfredharris32
A psychiatrist bills for 10 hours of psychotherapy and medication checks for a deceased woman. Has he committed fraud or abuse? Why? Can the deceased woman’s estate press charges if the bills were sent to Medicare, and not to the family?
S
upported by at least two references.
Must be 250 words
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A project to put on a major international sporting competition has t.docxfredharris32
A project to put on a major international sporting competition has the following major deliverables: Sports Venues, Athlete Accommodation, Volunteer Organization, Security, Events, and Publicity (which has already been broken down into pre-event publicity and post-event publicity.) Prepare a WBS for any single major deliverable on the list. Remember the 100 percent rule, and number your objectives.
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A professional services company wants to globalize by offering s.docxfredharris32
A professional services company wants to globalize by offering services to businesses and governments in other countries. What are the risks in globalization of services and how should the company address those risks in order to move forward with their plan?
Follow the ERM holistic Approach .Below are the holistic approach key points
1. Identify risk/challenges
2. Assess risks
3. Select risk response
4. Monitor risk
5. Communicate and report risks
6. Align ERM process to goals and objectives.
Below are challenges that need follow the ERM holistic approach:
1. Physical distance and Employees requirement in new locations.
2. Local taxes and export fees.
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A presentation( PowerPoint) on the novel, Disgrace by J . M. Coetzee.docxfredharris32
A presentation( PowerPoint) on the novel, Disgrace by J . M. Coetzee. t
This is the prompt:
" Black and white relationships in Disgrace cross lines from the personal to the political. Examine and evaluate the way South African politics impacts the personal relationships for Professor Lurie and his daughter."
8 slides
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a presentatiion on how the over dependence of IOT AI and robotics di.docxfredharris32
a presentatiion on how the over dependence of IOT AI and robotics distances the need for a medical practicioner for a patient .
do you agree with the technology or do you prefer the traditional medical system with doctor pateint diagnosis?
give examples or instances on situtions
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A nursing care plan (NCP) is a formal process that includes .docxfredharris32
A
nursing care plan (NCP)
is a formal process that includes correctly identifying existing needs, as well as recognizing potential needs or risks. Care plans also provide a means of communication among nurses, their patients, and other healthcare providers to achieve health care outcomes. Without the nursing care planning process, quality and consistency in patient care would be lost.
Medical Diagnosis: Alzheimer's disease
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A nurse educator is preparing an orientation on culture and the wo.docxfredharris32
A nurse educator is preparing an orientation on culture and the workplace. There is a need to address the many cultures that seek healthcare services and how to better understand the culture. This presentation will examine the role of the nurse as a culturally diverse practitioner.
Choose a culture that you feel less knowledgeable about: HISPANIC OR MEXICAN
Compare this culture with your own culture: ISLAND PACIFIC
Analyze the historical, socioeconomic, political, educational, and topographical aspects of this culture
What are the appropriate interdisciplinary interventions for hereditary, genetic, and endemic diseases and high-risk health behaviors within this culture?
What are the influences of their value systems on childbearing and bereavement practices
What are their sources of strength, spirituality, and magicoreligious beliefs associated with health and health care?
What are the health-care practices: acute versus preventive care; barriers to health care; the meaning of pain and the sick role; and traditional folk medicine practices?
What are cultural issues related to learning styles, autonomy, and educational preparation of content for this culture?
This PowerPoint® (Microsoft Office) or Impress® (Open Office) presentation should be a minimum of 20 slides, including a title, introduction, conclusion and reference slide, with detailed speaker notes and recorded audio comments for all content slides. Use at least four scholarly sources and make certain to review the module’s Signature Assignment Rubric before starting your presentation. This presentation is worth 400 points for quality content and presentation.
Total Point Value of Signature Assignment:
400 points
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A NOVEL TEACHER EVALUATION MODEL 1 Branching Paths A Nove.docxfredharris32
A NOVEL TEACHER EVALUATION MODEL 1
Branching Paths: A Novel Teacher Evaluation Model for Faculty Development
Kim A. Park,1 James P. Bavis,1 and Ahn G. Nu2
1Department of English, Purdue University
2Center for Faculty Education, Department of Educational Psychology, Quad City University
Author Note
Kim A. Park https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1825-0097
James P. Bavis is now at the MacLeod Institute for Music Education, Green Bay, WI.
We have no known conflict of interest to disclose.
Correspondence concerning this article should be addressed to Ahn G. Nu, Dept. of
Educational Psychology, 253 N. Proctor St., Quad City, WA, 09291. Email: [email protected]
jforte
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Page numbers begin on the first page and follow on every subsequent page without interruption. No other information (e.g., authors' last names) are required.
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Note: Green text boxes contain explanations of APA 7's paper formatting guidelines...
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...while blue text boxes contain directions for writing and citing in APA 7.
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The paper's title should be centered, bold, and written in title case. It should be three or four lines below the top margin of the page. In this sample paper, we've put three blank lines above the title.
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The running head is a shortened version of the paper's title that appears on every page. It is written in all capitals, and it should be flush left in the document's header. No "Running head:" label is included in APA 7. If the paper's title is fewer than 50 characters (including spaces and punctuation), the actual title may be used rather than a shortened form.
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Author notes contain the following parts in this order:
1. Bold, centered "Author Note" label.
2. ORCID iDs
3. Changes of author affiliation.
4. Disclosures/ acknowledgments
5. Contact information.
Each part is optional (i.e., you should omit any parts that do not apply to your manuscript, or omit the note entirely if none apply).
Format each item as its own indented paragraph.
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Authors' names appear two lines below the title. They should be written as follows:
First name, middle initial(s), last name.
Omit all professional titles and/or degrees (e.g., Dr., Rev., PhD, MA).
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Authors' affiliations follow immediately after their names. If the authors represent multiple institutions, as is the case in this sample, use superscripted numbers to indicate which author is affiliated with which institution. If all authors represent the same institution, do not use any numbers.
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ORCID is an organization that allows researchers and scholars to register professional profiles so that they can easily connect with one another. To include an ORCID iD in your author note, simply provide the author's name, followed by the green iD icon (hyperlinked to the URL that follows) and a hyperlink to the appropriate ORCID page.
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A Look at the Marburg Fever OutbreaksThis week we will exami.docxfredharris32
A Look at the Marburg Fever Outbreaks
This week we will examine: Marburg Fever in Africa.
MARBURG VIRUS
The largest and deadliest outbreak of Marburg hemorrhagic fever on record occurred in 2005. The Ministry of Health (MOH) in Angola reported a total of 374 cases, including 329 deaths reported countrywide. The Angolan Government, WHO and other partners,
established a surveillance system for identification of suspected cases and follow up of their contacts. Mobile teams were sent to the field to investigate rumors, obtain clinical specimens for laboratory tests, hospitalize suspected patients and monitor their contacts
B. For the Marburg fever case, you will discuss the major obstacles and difficulties that public health officials and health care workers had in controlling the outbreak of Marburg fever and the solutions they found to these difficulties. Your response must also include the following:
1. What is Marburg hemorrhagic fever?
2. How is Marburg hemorrhagic fever prevented?
3. What needs to be done to address the threat of Marburg hemorrhagic fever?
Must be at least 250 words and supported by at least two references
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A network consisting of M cities and M-1 roads connecting them is gi.docxfredharris32
A network consisting of M cities and M-1 roads connecting them is given. Cities are labeled with distinct integers within the range [o. (M-1)] Roads connect cities in such a way that each pair of distinct cities is connected either by a direct road or along a path consisting of direct roads. There is exactly one way to reach any city from any other city. In other words, cities and direct roads form a tree. The number of direct roads that must be traversed is called the distance between these two cities. For example, consider the following network consisting of ten cities and nine roads: 2 0 Cities 2 and 4 are connected directly, so the distance between them is 1. Cities 4 and 7 are connected by a path consisting of the direct roads 4-0,0-9 and 9-7; hence the distance between them is 3. One of the cities is the capital, and the goal is to count the number of cities positioned away from it at each of the distances 1,2,3,.., M -1. If city number 1 is the capital, then the cities positioned at the various distances from the If city number 1 is the capital, then the cities positioned at the various distances from the capital would be as follows: . 9 is at a distance of 1 · 0, 3, 7 are at a distance of 2; 8,4 are at a distance of 3; 2, 5, 6 are at a distance of 4. Write a function: class
Solution
t public int[] solution(int[] T)h that, given a non-empty array T consisting of M integers describing a network of M cities and M 1 roads, returns an array consisting of M-1 integers, specifying the number of cities positioned at each distance 1, 2,..., M - 1. Array T describes a network of cities as follows: · if T[P] Q and P = Q, then P is the capital; if T[P Q and P Q, then there is a direct road between cities P and Q. For example, given the following array T consisting of ten elements: T[2] 4 T[6]8 T[9] = 1 = 9 T[7] the function should return [1, 3, 2,3,0,0,0,0,01, as explained above. Write an efficient algorithm for the following assumptions: M is an integer within the range [1..100,000]; each element of array T is an integer within the range [0.M-1] there is exactly one (possibly indirect) connection between any two distinct cities.
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A minimum 20-page (not including cover page, abstract, table of cont.docxfredharris32
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The structure of the paper is as follows:
Abstract
Introduction
Statement of the problem
The purpose of the study
Method of the study (qualitative, quantitative or mixed study)
Literature review (10-15 peer-reviewed articles)
Results & Analysis
Conclusion & recommendations
References
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A major component of being a teacher is the collaboration with t.docxfredharris32
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For this assignment, create a 7-10 slide digital presentation professional development, for your peers, highlighting two forms of technology that can be used to enhance math instruction.
Include a title slide, reference slide, and presenter’s notes.
For each form of technology, include the following components:
A detailed description and how the technology works to engage students and enhance math instruction
A rationale for the benefits of using the technological tools to facilitate the creation or transfer of knowledge and skills
The safety precautions including the safe, legal, and ethical use of technology both at home and at school.
Description of how each form of technology can be used to support collaboration with families, students, and school personnel.
Description of how each form of technology engages students in collaboration with others in face-to-face or virtual environments
Support your findings with a minimum of three scholarly resources.
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a mad professor slips a secret tablet in your food that makes you gr.docxfredharris32
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A New Mindset for Leading Change [WLO 1][CLO 6]Through.docxfredharris32
A New Mindset for Leading Change [WLO: 1][CLO: 6]
Throughout the MAECEL program so far, you have encountered many opportunities to consider how you can make a difference as a professional and as a leader in the field of early childhood education. As Fullan (1993) states, as educators our purpose is “to make a difference in the lives of students regardless of background, to help produce citizens who can live and work productively in increasingly dynamically complex societies” (p. 4). Meaning, you, as an early childhood education professional and leader, have incredible capacity and potential to be a change agent who makes a positive difference in the lives of young children. With this new mindset in mind, please respond to each of the following prompts to share your insights on influencing educational change through action research.
· If you were to implement this study, what would be your next steps? How might implementation support better outcomes for young children and their families?
· Given the conditions discussed in Chapter 7 of the Mills (2014) textbook, discuss how you could support these conditions in an organization from the perspective of your current or future role in early childhood education.
· Share what it means to you to be a change agent in early childhood education and how you can leverage inquiry and research skills to promote quality education for young children.
.
A N A M E R I C A N H I S T O R YG I V E M EL I B.docxfredharris32
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51bc studies, no. 78, Summer 3A Nation of Artists” .docx
1. “A Nation of Artists”:
Alice R avenhill and the Society for
the Furtherance of British Columbia
Indian Arts and Crafts
L i Ly n n Wa n *
In 1996, Bill Reid sold a bronze sculpture to the Vancouver
International Airport Authority for $3 million, making him the
highest-paid Canadian artist to that date. An image of this
sculpture, The Spirit of Haida Gwaii, adorned the Canadian
twenty-
dollar bill from 2004 until 2012, and the original casting of the
sculpture
stands in front of the Canadian Embassy in Washington, DC.
Reid’s
journey to this position as a Haida artist and Canadian icon
provides
some insight into the often contradictory role of indigenous
imagery in
visual representations of Canadian culture and identity. While
Reid’s
work was certainly inspired by his ancestral ties, he learned
technique
in a jewellery-making course at the Ryerson Institute of
Technology in
Toronto, and he learned the fundamentals of Northwest Coast
design
from two books, in particular. One of these books is the
2. American
museum director Robert Bruce Inverarity’s Art of the Northwest
Coast
Indians, which was published in 1950; the other is Alice
Ravenhill’s
A Corner Stone of Canadian Culture: An Outline of the Arts and
Crafts of
the Indian Tribes of British Columbia.1
* Research for this article was funded by the Social Sciences
and Humanities Research Council
of Canada. Thanks to Shirley Tillotson and Richard Mackie for
invaluable guidance and
editorial advice. And to Rebecca Moy-Behre, who taught me
arts and crafts – not as an idea
but as a way of life.
1 Alice Ravenhill, A Corner Stone of Canadian Culture: An
Outline of the Arts and Crafts of the
Indian Tribes of British Columbia (Victoria: British Columbia
Provincial Museum, 1944).
In Tippett’s interpretation, Reid was consistently ambiguous
about his identity for the first
twenty years of his career. His decision to promote himself as
an “all Indian” artist did not
come about until the 1970s, after he received a Canada Council
fellowship. While Reid had
Haida ancestry and ties to the Haida village of Skidegate, and
his great-great-uncle, Charles
Edenshaw, as well as his grandfather, Charles Gladstone, were
both Haida artists, his mother
was raised to “become more white and less Haida,” and his
father was a “white man” in the
frontier of northern British Columbia in the early twentieth
century. See Maria Tippett, Bill
Reid: The Making of An Indian (Toronto: Random House,
3. 2003), 31, 25, 67.
bc studies52
The story of Alice Ravenhill, who spearheaded an arts and
crafts
revival in British Columbia in the 1930s, is an important one to
tell, and
not only because of her influence on Reid’s career. As Ronald
Hawker
has shown, Ravenhill’s work was incorporated into the Indian
education
system in both residential and day schools throughout the
province.2
By the 1940s, the notion of indigenous peoples being what
Ravenhill
described as “a nation of artists,”3 with inherent tendencies
towards the
visual and oral arts, became institutionalized at a federal level
in various
Department of Indian Affairs (dia) policies. This led to an
increase in
the production and sale of arts and crafts on the reserves.
Indigenous
art and imagery came to reflect continuity rather than extinction
as the
widespread nineteenth-century notion of the “Vanishing Indian”
was
compromised by the reality of an increasing indigenous
population.4
Born in England in 1859 into a privileged family, Ravenhill
began her
career as an educator in the fields of public health, home
economics,
4. and child care. She immigrated to Vancouver Island in 1910
after a
distinguished professional career in England. Her interest in
indigenous
arts and crafts only began in the late 1920s, but by the 1930s
she had
already become something of a local authority on the subject.
During
the 1930s and into the 1940s, Ravenhill devoted much of her
time to the
revitalization of indigenous arts and crafts in British Columbia,
a moral
endeavour that gained publicity and support from both
indigenous and
non-indigenous communities. Ravenhill’s self-education in
indigenous
arts and crafts began with needlework. On hooked rugs, bags,
book
covers, cushions, and other household objects she reproduced,
for sale,
various indigenous designs garnered from the Provincial
Archives.5
2 Hawker argues that Ravenhill and the Society for the
Furtherance of British Columbia
Indian Arts and Crafts, which she founded, used arts and crafts
as a way of reforming the
Indian educational system and that their work was key to the
“transition of First Nations
art promotion from voluntary organizations (in the 1930s) to
state institutions (in the 1940s).”
Although Hawker demonstrates that Ravenhill’s work stems
from a philanthropic notion that
educational reform through arts and crafts programs in Indian
day and residential schools
would contribute to solving the “Indian Problem,” he also shows
5. that this type of reform
was in line with assimilative policies and served to legitimize
government control over the
production and distribution of indigenous-made objects. See
Ronald Hawker, Tales of Ghosts:
First Nations Art in British Columbia, 1922-61 (Vancouver: ubc
Press, 2002), 82-99.
3 Alice Ravenhill, “Formation in Victoria of the Society for the
Furtherance of British Columbia
Indian Arts and Crafts” (1945), 6, Society for the Furtherance
of British Columbia Indian
Arts and Crafts (hereafter bciac Papers), 1939-1954, box 1, file
3, British Columbia Archives
(hereafter bca). See also Alice Ravenhill, “Biography, 1923-
1951” (1952), 224, bciac Papers, bca.
4 See Daniel Francis, “The Bureaucrat’s Indian,” in The
Imaginary Indian: The Image of the Indian
in Canadian Culture (Vancouver: Arsenal Pulp Press, 2011) ,
209-32.
5 In the latter half of the 1920s, Emily Carr was also
reproducing Northwest Coast designs,
for sale, in needlework and on pottery. See Hawker, Ghosts, 84;
Maria Tippett, Emily Carr:
A Biography (Toronto: Stoddart, 1994 [1979]), 134-36;
National Gallery of Canada/Vancouver
53Alice Ravenhill
Starting in the late 1920s, Ravenhill also gave public talks “on
the
characteristics and claims of these provincial tribal arts” at the
6. Island
and Victoria Arts and Crafts Society, the Women’s University
Club,
and the Business Men’s “Lunch Club” in Victoria. Ravenhill’s
nee-
dlework designs and her talks were initially met with poor sales,
poor
attendance, and a general lack of interest. This changed in 1935,
when
Ravenhill redirected her attention to children. That year,
sponsored
by the Carnegie Fund, she gave a series of four talks at the
Provincial
Museum of Natural History and Anthropology, which attracted a
total
audience of over 250 children. In the fall of 1936, an eight-
week course
on “British Columbia Indians” was added to the provincial
grade school
curriculum “without,” in her view, “authentic guidance being
provided
for the teachers.” Ravenhill took up this issue with the school
board,
and the result was the publication of her The Native Tribes of
British
Columbia in 1938.6
This influential book provides an overview of traditional
indigenous
culture in pre-contact times. The cover bears an image of a
totem pole,
leaning slightly to the right, as if to express its age and
weariness at
Art Gallery, Emily Carr: New Perspectives on a Canadian Icon
(Vancouver: Douglas and
McIntyre, 2006), plates 89-92.
7. 6 Ravenhill, “Formation,” 2-3.
Figure 1. Alice Ravenhill, circa 1936. Image I-51527 courtesy
of Royal British Columbia
Museum, BC Archives.
bc studies54
having stood, neglected, for so long. Here, Ravenhill defines
culture as
“a combination or embodiment of inherited customs and
traditions
which control their [indigenous people’s] actions, regulate their
pro-
cedures, and find expression in their emotions and arts.”7 While
she
also discusses geography, tools, weapons, housing, and food
production
methods in Native Tribes, Ravenhill’s main focus is on
indigenous arts
and crafts.
Native Tribes gained an unexpected and significant
endorsement in
1939, when a copy of the book was presented to the Queen
consort of
England, Queen Elizabeth, by Lady Tweedsmuir, a personal
friend of
Ravenhill’s and wife of the governor general of Canada. The
Queen
expressed much interest in the book and wrote Ravenhill that
she was
“specially desirous of learning more on the subject of the North
West
8. Pacific Coast arts and crafts.”8 Encouraged by the success of
Native
Tribes, Ravenhill formed a committee based in Victoria in 1940
called
the Society for the Furtherance of British Columbia Indian Arts
and
Crafts. This society was created “with the hope of arousing
more
interest in our BC Indians and their arts and crafts to promote
the
exercise of inherited abilities for their own welfare and for the
cultural
and commercial advancement of Canada.”9 Members of the
society
included Major Llewellyn Bullock-Webster, director of the
province’s
school and community drama; Alma Russell, formerly of the
Provincial
Archives; Dr. G. Clifford Carl, director of the Provincial
Museum of
Natural History and Anthropology; and anthropologist A.E.
Pickford.10
The first thing the society did following its formation was to
notify
provincial and federal dia officials of its existence in an attempt
to
raise funds and to gain official government support. For several
years,
Ravenhill corresponded with Harold McGill, dia director in
Ottawa;
R.A. Hoey, who was then in charge of the section concerned
with
school curricula and industrial training; and Major D.M.
MacKay,
Indian commissioner for the province. Despite her efforts, by
the mid-
9. 1940s Ravenhill lamented: “So far War claims have in every
case been
quoted as adequate reasons for inability to cooperate in
suggestions or
to respond to more definite requests.”11
7 Alice Ravenhill, The Native Tribes of British Columbia
(Victoria: Charles F. Banfield, 1938), 10.
8 Ravenhill, “Formation,” 10.
9 Ibid., 11.
10 For Bullock-Webster, see J.L. Hoffman, “Bullock-Webster
and the BC Dramatic School,
1921-1932,” Theatre Research in Canada [Online], 8, 2 ( June
1987). For Carl and Pickford, see
Peter Corley-Smith, White Bears and Other Curiosities: The
First 100 Years of the Royal British
Columbia Museum (Victoria: Royal British Columbia Museum,
1989).
11 Ravenhill, “Formation,” 14.
55Alice Ravenhill
Even though Ravenhill and the society were unable to solicit
government funding, they continued lobbying the government
and
proceeded with their work of promoting young BC indigenous
artists
within the province, throughout Canada, and abroad. In 1941, a
rep-
resentative body of the Victoria society was formed in Oliver,
British
Columbia, “which,” wrote Ravenhill, “included from the start
10. three
Okanagan Indians.” Two years later, the first BC Aboriginal
people
became honorary members of the Victoria society, after “several
Chiefs
and representative individuals” attended meetings and assisted
the
society in its efforts to “arouse more public interest.”12
Ravenhill ’s second book, A Corner Stone of Canadian Culture:
An Outline of the Arts and Crafts of the Indian Tribes of British
Columbia,
appeared in 1944 after more than three years of labour on the
part of
Ravenhill and her assistant Betty Newton. This monograph
contains
drawings of designs created by Bill Reid’s great-great-uncle,
Charles
Edenshaw, and Reid later credited this book with contributing
to his
artistic identity and development.13 Corner Stone was
distributed to
all of the “Indian schools” in the province. Its purpose was to
revive
interest in, provide instruction for, and stimulate the production
of
“traditional” arts and crafts among indigenous children. For
Ravenhill,
Corner Stone was an expression of her belief that British
Columbia’s
indigenous peoples were “a nation of artists,” with inherent
tendencies
towards the visual and oral arts.
Work on Corner Stone commenced in 1941, when the dia office
in
Ottawa commissioned Ravenhill to produce twenty wall charts
of
11. various designs “to cover all phases of Indian art work and all
parts of
the Province.”14 The charts, along with over a hundred pages of
text
outlining the characteristics, significance, and legendary origins
of each
design, were circulated among the Indian schools in the
province. These
were also published in a condensed book form, for sale to the
general
public.15 Ravenhill and Newton were paid one hundred dollars
for their
work, which, as Ravenhill declared, did “not much more than
cover the
cost of materials,” but they felt that their work was “richly
worthwhile
as sowing precious seed.”16 Following the publication of
Corner Stone,
Ravenhill stepped down from the presidency of the society
because of
12 Ibid., 12-13.
13 Hawker, Ghosts, 89; Tippett, Reid, 67.
14 MacKay to Ravenhill, 17 June 1940, bciac Papers, bca. See
also Ravenhill to Bullock-Webster,
11 February 1941, box 1, file 2, bciac Papers, bca; G. Clifford
Carl to Ravenhill, 21 February
1941, bciac Papers, bca; and Ravenhill to Carl, 25 February
1941, bciac Papers, bca.
15 G. Clifford Carl, “Foreword,” in Ravenhill, Corner Stone.
16 Ravenhill to Beatrice Cave-Browne-Cave, 29 June 1940,
bciac Papers, bca.
12. bc studies56
“a disabling accident,” and her role in it was taken over by Dr.
Carl of
the Provincial Museum of Natural History and Anthropology.
However,
Ravenhill’s leadership and her approach to revitalizing
indigenous arts
and crafts continued to influence the movement at least into the
1950s.
Ravenhill was a central figure in the revitalization of
indigenous arts
and crafts in British Columbia, and her two books did indeed
become
“cornerstones” of the movement. A word is required here on the
larger
movement that informed the BC indigenous arts and crafts
revival. Arts
and Crafts, an international reform movement that was both
philan-
thropic and socialist, was based on an ideology that championed
the arts
and crafts as a means towards economic self-sufficiency and
moral uplift.
The movement took hold in England, the United States, and
Canada
during the late nineteenth century, largely based on the
philosophy
popularized by the British writer, artist, and socialist William
Morris.
The socio-economic aspect of this philosophy encouraged a
return to a
communal village economy, wherein artisans perfected their
craft and
bartered their wares. Aesthetically, the Arts and Crafts
philosophy
13. advocated imperfection as “evidence of the essential humanity
of the
work process; by contrast, the perfections of antique handwork
and
modern machine production were considered the products of
different
types of ‘slave’ labour.”17 In other words, a return to the daily
use and
production of beautiful, handmade objects was one solution to
the ills
of industrial society. This movement, in its purest form, was
embodied
in cooperative rural craft communities like the Shakers in the
north-
eastern United States. By the early twentieth century, the
influence of
the Arts and Crafts movement on many reformers and social
workers
was apparent. Administrators of settlement houses like Hull
House in
Chicago and Toynbee Hall in London adapted Morris’s ideas in
their
social work, convinced that art education was the key to the
moral uplift
of impoverished immigrants.18
In early twentieth-century Canada, Arts and Crafts movements
adapted variations of these earlier socialist ideas, which found
parallels
in “modern” antimodernist sentiments. The BC indigenous arts
and
crafts revival was a localized variation of this larger movement.
Here,
pre-industrial society had consisted of only a handful of white
settlers
17 Diane Waggoner, ed., The Beauty of Life: William Morris
14. and the Art of Design (New York:
Thames and Hudson, 2003), 25.
18 For settlement houses, see Mary Lynn McCree Bryan,
Barbara Bair, and Maree De Angury,
eds., The Selected Papers of Jane Addams: Preparing to Lead,
1860-1881 (Urbana: University of
Illinois Press, 2003); and Mary Lynn McCree Bryan and Allen
F. Davis, 100 Years at Hull-House
(Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1990).
57Alice Ravenhill
and a large population of indigenous communities. Thus, for
British
Columbians, indigenous people were central actors in the
Romantic
notion of the “primitive,” on which the antimodernist image of
the
idyllic “premodern” society was based. Proponents of
revitalizing in-
digenous arts and crafts believed that “authentic” indigenous
designs,
aesthetics, colours, and techniques could only be produced by
authentic
indigenous people, by means of “inherited ability.”19 In other
words,
the essence of indigenous arts and crafts was its inherently
“primitive”
nature. Equally important to this movement was the notion that,
because
indigenous people in British Columbia had been colonized,
much of
their knowledge of traditional arts and crafts had been, or was,
15. in the
process of being lost.
The most immediate task during the early years of the revival
was
the methodical process of defining what constituted authentic
“Indian”
arts and crafts before that knowledge disappeared. In this way,
the
BC Indian Arts and Crafts revival overlapped, in theory and in
practice,
with professional and amateur salvage ethnologists of the day.
But there
were key differences in their objectives: the former sought to
revitalize
the arts while the latter aimed only to preserve material art
objects.
In order to revitalize, however, traditional “Indian” culture first
had to
be defined. This was Ravenhill’s agenda and it was what she
achieved
with her two books.
Her interest in indigenous arts and crafts renewal was not
unique,
nor was it carried out in isolation. For example, her
contemporaries and
peers Maisie Hurley and George Raley also engaged in
philanthropic
work that involved revitalizing indigenous art and culture in the
province. Their work differed from that of the late nineteenth-
and early
twentieth-century salvage ethnologists and collectors, who
focused their
attention primarily on the accumulation and preservation of
material
objects.20 While Hurley is best known for the Maisie Hurley
Collection
16. of Native Art that is now housed at the North Vancouver
Museum and
Archives, she was also an educator and advocate of indigenous
rights.
Her biographer, Sharon Fortney, explains that Hurley
envisioned her
art collection “playing an important role in cultural education
and in
the revitalization of Native artistic traditions.”21 Similarly, the
Reverend
19 Ravenhill, “Formation,” 7.
20 For salvage ethnology, see Douglas Cole, Captured Heritage:
The Scramble for Northwest Coast
Artifacts (Vancouver: ubc Press, 1995).
21 Sharon Fortney, “Entwined Histories: The Creation of the
Maisie Hurley Collection of Native
Art,” BC Studies 167 (2010): 73. See also Janey Mary Nicol,
“The Voice of Maisie Hurley,” British
Columbia History 45, 2 (2012): 37-43.
bc studies58
George Raley, who headed the Coqualeetza Residential School
in
Chilliwack, believed that revitalizing indigenous arts and crafts
was
essential to the practical training, education, and economic
well-being of
indigenous children.22 His biographer, Paige Raibmon,
discovered that
Raley’s ideas about the role of arts and crafts in improving the
17. lives of
indigenous people in Canada were also inspired by the “New-
Deal-for-
Indians” era in the United States in the 1920s and 1930s.23 In
this period,
American Indian educational policy shifted from one that sought
to
eradicate indigenous culture to one that aimed to develop
indigenous
culture in the Indian schools. Even though Canadian Indian day
and
residential schools maintained an official policy of cultural
assimilation
until after the Second World War, by the late 1930s, individuals
like
Raley, Hurley, and Ravenhill were active and successful in
promoting
a program of revitalizing indigenous arts and crafts in these
schools.24
Ravenhill ’s antimodernist critique of industrial capital echoed
William Morris and, more distantly, Marx’s ideas about the
circulation
of capital.25 In Native Tribes, she notes the timeliness of
studying pre-
historic peoples and cultures in the midst of an unprecedented
economic
depression – the first great crisis of industrial capitalism in
Canada.
Ravenhill describes 1930s Canada as
a period when comfort and convenience [were] measured by
ability to
pay for their provision unrelated to the exercise of individual
resource-
fulness; when every detail of daily life [was] supplied on a large
scale
18. by mechanized methods; when distance [was] annihilated by
modern
devices of transport, [and when] the achievements of a people
isolated
for many centuries from contact with others [were] apt to be
over-
looked and deprecated.26
Here, her argument for the importance of understanding pre-
industrial
artistic skills is expressed as a critique of contemporary society.
This
antimodernist aspect of her work, which drew from Morris’s
writings,
ethnological practices of the day, New Deal politics in the
United States,
and Marxism, contributed to her success in generating public
interest
in indigenous arts and crafts.
22 Paige Raibmon, “A New Understanding of Things Indian:
George Raley’s Negotiation of
the Residential School Experience,” BC Studies 110 (1996): 86-
93.
23 Ibid., 90-91.
24 For indigenous arts and crafts in Canada, see Gerald R.
McMaster, “Tenuous Lines of Descent:
Indian Arts and Crafts of the Reservation Period,” Canadian
Journal of Native Studies 9,
2 (1989): 205-36.
25 See Karl Marx, Grundrisse, trans. Martin Nicolaus (New
York: Penguin Books, 1973), 501-50.
26 Ravenhill, Native Tribes, 9.
19. 59Alice Ravenhill
Ravenhill’s antimodernist stance was further articulated as a
critical
observation of the effects of European colonization and
assimilation
policies. According to Ravenhill, pre-European Aboriginal
peoples
were
expert in fishing, hunting, canoe making and house
construction. But
the death blow was dealt to the exercise of their associated arts
and
crafts when adventurers and traders and well intentioned
missionaries
carelessly or ignorantly swept away the deeply seated customs
of a
hitherto isolated “nation of artists” … with appalling rapidity.
Grave
demoralization soon followed the introduction of hitherto
unknown
alcohol, unfamiliar trading methods and diverse factors which
left –
after a short period of attempted self-defence – a bewildered,
irritated
people faced with the loss of their lands, their familiar methods
of self
support, their religion, from which sprang stimulus to their arts
and
not least, their self respect.27
Her conviction that revitalizing indigenous arts and crafts was
20. necessary
to the overall well-being of indigenous Canadians was further
voiced
as a more specific protest against Canadian dia policy,
particularly the
Indian day and residential school systems.28 Ravenhill argued
that, in
Canadian Indian schools: “the children are confronted with
unknown
subjects in an unknown language – diverse from their own
picturesque
forms of expression; a process described by Sir George Maxwell
in 1942
out of his wide experience as ‘crippling and destroying a
people’s soul;
fatal to self-respect and inducing in the individual contempt for
his
own race.’”29 In light of her background, it is not surprising
that, for
Ravenhill, the solution to these problems was the revival of
indigenous
arts and crafts. Ravenhill and the Society for the Furtherance of
British
Columbia Indian Arts and Crafts focused primarily on children,
and
27 Ravenhill, “Formation,” 6.
28 Ravenhill was one of many individuals, both Aboriginal and
non-Aboriginal, who demanded
reform of the Indian educational system in Canada. Children
who attended the schools,
their parents, chiefs, and reformers like Ravenhill resisted,
protested, and advocated for
change throughout the twentieth century. For residential schools
and resistance, see Celia
21. Haig-Brown, Resistance and Renewal: Surviving the Indian
Residential School (Vancouver:
Tillicum Library, 1988); and J.R. Miller, Shingwauk’s Vision:
A History of Native Residential
Schools (Toronto: University of Toronto Press, 1996).
29 Ravenhill, “Formation,” 6. Sir George Maxwell worked for
the British civil service in Malaya,
eventually taking the post of chief secretary of the Federated
Malay States from 1921 to 1926.
When Ravenhill wrote this passage in 1945, British colonial
rule over Malaya was in the
process of being dissolved as a result of opposition by the
Malay people. The Federation of
Malaya was established in 1948, and Malaysia gained
independence from Britain in 1957, with
an indigenous Islamic government. See Sir William George
Maxwell, The Civil Defence of
Malaya (London: Hutchinson and Co., 1944).
bc studies60
on the revitalization of arts and crafts in Indian schools,
because they
believed that innate artistic talents were most recoverable, and
responsive
to nurturing, in children.
Ravenhill was influenced by other intellectual currents. Her ap-
proach assumed a belief in racial essentialism. She assumed that
the
knowledge and skill required to produce authentic indigenous
arts
and crafts derived from an inherent indigenous essence. In a
section
22. of Native Tribes entitled “The Study of Racial Origins,” she
explains
that race is studied along four lines: prehistoric remains,
anatomical
and physical characteristics, language, and “the type and
standards
of culture revealed in a people’s customs and arts.”30 This idea
that
the arts are representative of some kind of racial essence was
similarly
articulated by one representative of the dia. In a public
statement to
promote Ravenhill’s 1944 publication of Corner Stone, R.A.
Hoey of the
dia office in Ottawa declared on behalf of the dia: “We believe
… that
Canadian Indians have a real contribution to make to the
prosperity
of the Dominion … by the exercise of their innate gifts of
conception,
technique and intelligence.” In the book itself, Ravenhill
similarly
declares:
Give an Indian boy a pot of paint and a brush and watch results.
Without Art School or instruction in method or style, animals,
trees,
mountains are stored in his mind, alive, and ready to spring out
and
express themselves in their own vitality and style, stored up by
close
observation and retentive memory, often constituting an integral
part
of his life, ready for expression at a moment’s notice.31
Although a philanthropic sense of duty was an underlying
23. motivation for
both, the dia officials had traditionally favoured policies of
assimilation,
while Ravenhill favoured a return to the racial and cultural
essence of
the indigenous person through arts and crafts.32
While a lack of funding meant that government policy did not
always
materialize into practice, Ravenhill’s brand of arts and crafts
ideology,
with its focus on revitalization rather than museum-like
preservation
and assimilation, was slowly being integrated into the official
workings
of the dia during the interwar years. A dia anthropological
division
was established in 1936, and experts like Diamond Jenness,
Douglas
Leechman, and Marius Barbeau acted as consultants. The
following
30 Ravenhill, “Formation,” 13-14.
31 Ravenhill, Corner Stone, 1, 2.
32 Ravenhill to the Community Drama Branch, Adult Education
Department, Victoria, 12 June
1940, bciac Papers, bca.
61Alice Ravenhill
year, “the revival and advancement of Indian handicraft”
became official
government policy, but assistance from the federal government
was
24. confined almost exclusively to Ontario and Quebec. The reason
given for
this was as follows: “Indian handicraft projects, to be
successful, impose
upon the Department an obligation to provide constant
supervision
and this obligation has until now confined efforts largely to
reserves in
Eastern Canada.”33 But, by 1940, the efforts of reformers like
Ravenhill
to promote regional artistic accomplishments outside of central
Canada
had gained the attention of dia officials, and the production and
sale of
handicrafts had become official (if underfunded) policy on a
national
scale.34
“The Remarkable Gifts of Francois Baptiste”35
In addition to her publications and her success lobbying
government
officials, Ravenhill’s brief but influential work with the Society
for the
Furtherance of British Columbia Indian Arts and Crafts was
marked
by two key …
3/29/2020 Soil Nitrogen and Sulfur (Chapter 13) Notes -
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25. Soil Nitrogen and Sulfur (Chapter 13) Notes
Soil Nitrogen and Sulfur (Chapter 13) Notes
Did you know ....
Did you know that nitrogen is commonly the most limiting
nutrient in agronomic settings? Chapter 11 begins
our journey through the major plant limiting nutrients and their
cycles in soil discussing why nitrogen is most
limiting, how nitrogen cycles in soil, and then reviewing similar
information for sulfur.
Lecture content notes are accompanied by videos listed below
the notes in each submodule (e.g. Soil Nitrogen
and Sulfur (Chapter 14) Videos A though E). Print or download
lecture notes then view videos in succession
alongside lecture content and add additional notes from each
video. The start of each video is noted
in parenthesis (e.g. Content for Video A) within each lecture
note set and contains lecture content through the
note for the next video (e.g. Content for Video B).
Figures and tables unless specifically referenced are from the
course text, Nature and Property of Soils, 14th
Edition, Brady and Weil.
Content Video A
Soil Nitrogen
Nitrogen
Generally most limiting macronutrients
Yellow, Chlorotic Tissue
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Necessary Requirement for High Productivity
Major Plant Component - Microbial too!
Amino Acids
Nucleic Acids
Proteins
Enzymes
Chlorophyll
Plants utilize cation, anion, and organic forms:
Ammonium – NH4+
27. Nitrate - NO3- - most plants prefer
Low Molecular Weight Organics – proteins and amino acids
Nitrogen in Soil
Atmosphere 78% N2 gas
N≡N – Triple Bond, Inert
Transform into Reactive Species
Lightening
Microbial Fixation
NO3-, NH4+, Organics
Soil N – generally low amounts plant available
SOM – degradation makes available
Fixed in minerals
Inorganics – Very Soluble – Easy to Loose!
Nitrogen Cycle
Nitrogen Cycle
3/29/2020 Soil Nitrogen and Sulfur (Chapter 13) Notes -
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28. https://gotoclass.tnecampus.org/d2l/le/content/8094442/viewCo
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Soil and Environmental Quality, 2nd Edition, Pierzynski, et al.
Components of the Nitrogen Cycle
Inputs
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Inputs
N Fixation
Atmospheric Deposition
Commercial Fertilizers
Transformations
Mineralization
Immobilization
Nitrification
Denitrification
Losses
29. Denitrification
Leaching
Erosion
Ammonia Volatilization
Fixation by Clays
Plant Uptake
Content Video B
Nitrogen Inputs
Lightening
Breaks apart triple bonds
Gaseous forms of N, then Nitrates
Come back to surface: rain, snow, dust, etc.
Atmospheric Nitrogen Deposition
Industry and CAFO
SOX –NOX gasses
Problem for forests and aquatic life
Industrial Fixation of Nitrogen Gas to Ammonia
Extreme Pressure and Heat
30. Haber-Bosh – Germans – World War I
Thought to be one of the greatest developments of the 20th
century
Move from organic N to synthetic N – Huge boost productivity
Inputs: Biological Nitrogen Fixation
Conversion of Atmospheric N2 into Organic N
Symbiotic
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Symbiotic
Legumes – Bacteria
Non-Legumes – Actinomycetes
Independent – Cyanobacteria and Heterotrophic Bacteria
Catalyst – Nitrogenase Enzyme
Requires LOTS of Energy – Plant association plus
31. Destroyed by oxygen – Protect in nodule – Leghemoglobin
Soybean Root Nodules – Bradyrhizobium
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http://www.agweb.com/article/bacteria_give_beans_a_boost/
Nitrogen Cycle
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32. Content Video C
Mineralization and Immobilization
Mineralization – Conversion of Organic to Inorganic Forms
Immobilization – Conversion of Inorganic to Organic Forms
Transformations: Mineralization
Conversion of Organic N to Inorganic N
Organic N – “Bioparticles” and SOM
Proteins, Amino Acids, Ammine (Organic w/ NH2)
Indigenous N sources (SOM), crop residues, or manure
Microbial community yield energy w/ change of oxidation state
N
N for growth and provide plant available N
SOM ~5% N – 1 to 3 % SOM degraded/yr
Soil with 2% SOM – 2,000 kg N/ha (1780 lbs/acre)
2% Mineralized/year – 40 kg N/ha (36 lbs/acre) <Generous>
Much lower than high value crop needs – Add commercial N
fertilizer
Transformations: Immobilization
Conversion of Inorganic N to Organic N
Opposite of Mineralization
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Microbial Assimilation
Microbial community then goes to work on organic C
Mineralization – Immobilization Simultaneous
Nutritional Balance and Soil Conditions Dictate
Transformations: C:N Ratios
C:N Ratio > 30 – Net Immobilization
Microbes using N for own use; not adding to system
C:N Ratio < 20 – Net Mineralization
Microbes able to use C and N, cycle, build SOM, add N back to
system
Implications
Composing with High C:N
Mulches
34. Wheat Straw Degradation
Transformations: Nitrification
Nitrification: Bacterial Oxidation of NH4+ to NO3-
Conditions right and bacteria available – RAPID –
Chemoautotrophs
Warm, Moist soil
Ammonium
Oxygen
Nitrite is toxic to plants
Reaction same – No matter what N source - mineralization,
manure, commercial fertilizer
Source of acidity – H+
Content Video D
Transformation/Loss: Denitrification
Denitrification: Reduction of NO3- to Gaseous Forms N
Anaerobic Conditions
Wet conditions – Saturated soils after big rain can have
anaerobic zones in hours
Microsites in colloids
Heterotrophic – Facultative Anaerobes
NO3- Terminal Electron Acceptor
35. Many soil genera: Pseudomonas, Bacillus, Micrococcus, etc.
Organic C for the microbial community
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Organic C for the microbial community
Warm/Moist temperatures
Significant – Important LOSS of N
Con: GHC Source Pro: Wetlands, Decrease Nitrate
Loss: Ammonia Volatilization
Ammonia Volatilization – Gaseous Loss NH3↑
High pH – Alkaline soils – Force equation to the right – Greater
Loss
Urea - N Fertilizer – NH2-CO-NH2 – Surface Applied
Warm and Moist – Urea absorbs moisture – Forms Ammonia
Gas – LOSS
Problematic only for ~2 week period after application
36. Urea levels high in animal manure – Manage – Can
inject/incorporate
Management Issue
Loss: Nitrate via Leaching, Runoff, Erosion
Nitrate - NO3- - Anion
Mechanisms of Loss
Plant uptake (Ideal)
Leaches thru profile with water (Organic N too)
Transported in runoff water (NH4+ too)
Transported in soil with erosion (NH4+ too)
Environmental and Health Issue
Eutrophication – Excess nutrients in water
Drinking water - Nitrate metabolism products harmful
Chesapeake Bay
Dead Zone in the Gulf
N Loss: Fixation in Clays
NH4+ - Cation
Attracted to negative charges in soil colloids
Fixation
37. Similar in size to K
2:1 Expanding clays – Vermiculite
Fixed in Interlayers – Unavailable
More Clay with depth – More fixation
Content Video E
Nitrogen Cycle
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Soil and Environmental Quality, 2nd Edition, Pierzynski, et al.
Management of N
Commercial Fertilizer Industry
“Insurance Fertilizer”
Paradigm Shift
N Fertilizer Cost HIGH
Severe Environmental Ramifications
38. Precision Agriculture
Urban Issues
Golf Courses
Small Yards
Nitrogen Cycle
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Nitrogen Cycle
4 Major Transformations
Mineralization / Immobilization
Nitrification
Denitrification
Nitrogen (N2) Fixation
What is happening to the N itself?
Why is it happening?
When does it occur?
39. How does it occur?
Where/when might you expect this to occur?
And who is doing the transformation?
Content Video F
Soil Sulfur
https://www.pioneer.com/home/site/us/agronomy/library/templa
te.CONTENT/guid.7786411D-9BC0-C084-8A66-
CC7BE3A9C8E9
Sulfur
Secondary Macronutrient
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ntent/60403422/View 12/14
Decrease in sulfur containing compounds – fertilizers,
pesticides, emissions, etc.
Somewhat limited in agronomic soils
40. Essential nutrient – biological systems
Amino Acids
Vitamins
Enzymes
Hormones
Cabbage and onions – Aromatics w/ Sulfur – Smell and Taste
Sulfur in Soil
Sulfur Availability:
Majority in SOM
Parent Materials – Weather – Gypsum
Adsorption Sulfur Dioxide Gas – Atmosphere
Plant Uptake:
Sulfate – SO4-
Sorption – Rain/Dust – Various Forms - H2S, SO2, H2SO4
Sulfur Cycle – Similar to N
Plant Sulfur Uptake
Sulfur Cycle
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AGRI1050R50: Introduction to Soil Science (2020S)
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Soil and Environmental Quality, 2nd Edition, Pierzynski, et al.
Acid Mine Drainage
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Reflect in ePortfolio Download Print
Acid Mine Drainage
Appalachian Coal Mining – Pyrite (FeS2) Overburden
Oxygenation of metal sulfites (Pyrite and others) yields
tremendous amounts of acid
Thiobacillus sp. mediate process
Mining companies tasked with remediation:
Rock overburden dumped on top of the ground
Build soil structure – add organic materials
Remediate acidity – Liming materials
42. Re-vegetate
West Virginia - Acid Mine Drainage
http://www.dep.wv.gov/WWE/getinvolved/sos/Pages/AMD.aspx
Review Sulfur
Why is sulfur an important nutrient?
Task: View this topic
Activity Details
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Soil Phosphorus and Potassium (Chapter 14) Notes
Soil Phosphorus and Potassium (Chapter 14) Notes
Did you know ....
Did you know there is an area in the Gulf of Mexico where
animals and plants cannot live due to high levels of
43. nutrients? Chapter 14 moves us down the nutrient line to
discuss phosphorus and potassium in soils including
eutrophication which contributes to the Dead Zone in the Gulf.
Lecture content notes are accompanied by videos listed below
the notes in each submodule (e.g. Soil
Phosphorus and Potassium (Chapter 14) Videos A though D).
Print or download lecture notes then view videos
in succession alongside lecture content and add additional notes
from each video. The start of each video is
noted in parenthesis (e.g. Content for Video A) within each
lecture note set and contains lecture content
through the note for the next video (e.g. Content for Video B).
Figures and tables unless specifically referenced are from the
course text, Nature and Property of Soils, 14th
Edition, Brady and Weil.
Content Video A
Soil Phosphorus
http://www.nasa.gov/vision/earth/environment/dead_zone.html
Phosphorus
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p
Essential Element
Energy Molecule – ATP
DNA/RNA
Phospholipids
Plant
Photosynthesis, Flowering/Fruiting, Root Growth, Meristem
Deficiency: Stunted growth, weak stem, dark blue/green
Mobile in plant – moves old to young tissues
Plant Uptake – Low, Low P in soil solution
HP042- or H2PO4-
Phosphorus and Soil Fertility
Conundrum:
Total P low (200 to 2000 kg/ha in upper 15 cm)
P Compounds in soil not plant available and insoluble
Added P (fertilize, manures) become unavailable too
Environmental Quality
Underdeveloped Countries – Lack of P fertilizer, limits crop
production
45. P Enrichment and Loss – Eutrophication
Content Video B
Phosphorus Cycle
https://gotoclass.tnecampus.org/d2l/common/dialogs/quickLink/
quickLink.d2l?ou=8094442&type=content&rcode=TBR-
23968859
3/29/2020 Soil Phosphorus and Potassium (Chapter 14) Notes -
AGRI1050R50: Introduction to Soil Science (2020S)
https://gotoclass.tnecampus.org/d2l/le/content/8094442/viewCo
ntent/60403429/View 3/10
Soil and Environmental Quality, 2nd Edition, Pierzynski, et al.
Phosphorus Cycle
Weathering P minerals primary source – Inorganic
Parent materials and weathering degree dictate sources
Apatites (Ca-Alkaline) vs Fe/Al Oxides (Hi Weathered –Acidic)
Soluble P in solution – Low - 0.001 to 1 ml/L
Ion Dictated by soil pH – HP042- or H2PO4-
Fixation P – Strong – Not exchangeable
Movement to roots is SLOW
Mass Flow
Water
Mycorrhizae
46. Losses P
No real gaseous loss
Plant Uptake
Leaching not huge issue – strong affinity colloids
Erosion/Runoff - major environmental loss mechanism under
right conditions
Phosphorus and pH
3/29/2020 Soil Phosphorus and Potassium (Chapter 14) Notes -
AGRI1050R50: Introduction to Soil Science (2020S)
https://gotoclass.tnecampus.org/d2l/le/content/8094442/viewCo
ntent/60403429/View 4/10
Inorganic P Fixation
More on Fixation
Fixation Capacity in Soils
3/29/2020 Soil Phosphorus and Potassium (Chapter 14) Notes -
AGRI1050R50: Introduction to Soil Science (2020S)
https://gotoclass.tnecampus.org/d2l/le/content/8094442/viewCo
ntent/60403429/View 5/10
P Availability Soil Orders
47. Organic Sources of P
Organic P – SOM
1/10 to ¼ of N levels
Mineralization C:P< 200:1
Important in Hi Weathered Soils even with Low SOM
Inositol Phosphates
Enzymes
Phytic Acid – P grain storage
Non-Ruminants – hogs and chickens - cannot process
Add to animal feed – high P levels in manure
Organic P
More soluble - less fixation than inorganic P
Greater likelihood loss in leaching, runoff
Over application of organic forms P – manure
Content Video C
Point Source vs Non-Point Source Pollution
Point Source – Identifiable source of discharge
Emission, Solids, Liquids
Wastewater treatment facilities, industry
Non-Point Source – Unidentifiable source of discharge
Nutrients and Pathogens
Agriculture, Septic Tanks, Urban Discharge
https://gotoclass.tnecampus.org/d2l/common/dialogs/quickLink/
quickLink.d2l?ou=8094442&type=content&rcode=TBR-
48. 23968860
3/29/2020 Soil Phosphorus and Potassium (Chapter 14) Notes -
AGRI1050R50: Introduction to Soil Science (2020S)
https://gotoclass.tnecampus.org/d2l/le/content/8094442/viewCo
ntent/60403429/View 6/10
Forms of P in Runoff
Form of P Name Description
TP Total Phosphorus Total P in Runoff
Volume
TSP Total Soluble P Orthophosphates and
Organic P
SP Soluble P Soluble forms of
Inorganic P
SOP Soluble Organic P Soluble forms of
Organic P
PP Particulate P Total P in Sediment
BAP Bioavailable P Total P Readily
Available
Eutrophication
http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/gcsebitesize/science/edexcel/prob
lems_in_environment/pollutionrev4.shtml
http://www.bbc.co.uk/schools/gcsebitesize/science/edexcel/prob
lems_in_environment/pollutionrev4.shtml
3/29/2020 Soil Phosphorus and Potassium (Chapter 14) Notes -
49. AGRI1050R50: Introduction to Soil Science (2020S)
https://gotoclass.tnecampus.org/d2l/le/content/8094442/viewCo
ntent/60403429/View 7/10
http://extension.usu.edu/waterquality/htm/agriculturewq
Managing P
Apply P to meet plant needs – Do not over apply P
Apply in combination with N fertilizers
N fertilizers create acidity locally, keeps soluble, plant
available
Apply in band as Starter Fertilizer
Minimizes surface area for fixation
Make plant available early, minimize loss
Enhance cycling of organic P
Cover crops – Build SOM, etc.
Mycorrhizal Symbiosis
Control soil pH – Near-neutral for max solubility
Minimize tillage – Decrease loss runoff/erosion
Buffer/Filter Strips – Catch P/N in runoff water/sediments
Content Video D
Soil Potassium
http://www.extension.umn.edu/agriculture/nutrient-
management/potassium/potassium-for-crop-production/
51. Plant Uptake – Generally large total quantities in soil, low
availability
K+ ion in soil solution
Potassium Cycle
Liming and Soil K
Maintaining Neutral pH with Lime
http://www.extension.umn.edu/agriculture/nutrient-
management/potassium/potassium-for-crop-production/
3/29/2020 Soil Phosphorus and Potassium (Chapter 14) Notes -
AGRI1050R50: Introduction to Soil Science (2020S)
https://gotoclass.tnecampus.org/d2l/le/content/8094442/viewCo
ntent/60403429/View 9/10
Maintaining Neutral pH with Lime
K+ more readily replace Ca2+ and Mg2+ (neutral) than Al3+
(acidic)
Keeps K+ in soil profile
Potassium (K) Cycle
Additions
Weathering parent materials and exchange on soil colloids
Not associated with SOM
Much total K not available: low solubility and fixation
Fertilizer needed in cropping systems
Losses
Leaching – Greater in acidic conditions
Crop Uptake - Big loss
52. Luxury Consumption
No gaseous loss
Forms of K in Soils
Pools dependent on parent material, clay content, CEC
Primary Mineral Structure – Micas/Feldspars
90-98% total soil K
SLOWLY available – relatively unavailable pool
Non-Exchangeable K – Fixed in Clays
3/29/2020 Soil Phosphorus and Potassium (Chapter 14) Notes -
AGRI1050R50: Introduction to Soil Science (2020S)
https://gotoclass.tnecampus.org/d2l/le/content/8094442/viewCo
ntent/60403429/View 10/10
Reflect in ePortfolio Download Print
Non-Exchangeable K – Fixed in Clays
1-10% total K
Slowly available
Readily Available
0.1 to 0.2% Soil
Solution
53. K
1 to 2% Readily Exchangeable K – Soil Colloids
K Fixation
Amount determined clay and pH
1:1 (Kaolinite) – Very little fixation
2:1 Clays (Vermiculite especially) – High levels of fixation
pH
Liming increases fixation
Closer to the soil colloids – 2:1 clays fixation
Managing Soil K
Crop uptake – major removal
SOIL TEST – Know what need!
Commercial Fertilizer Addition – Potash (KCl)
Maintain adequate soil solution K for particular plant needs
Many soils just need ‘maintenance K’
Highly weathered, acidic soils, or sandy soils - generally need
more commercial K
Maintain soil pH
54. Review P and K
What is P utilized for in the plant?
What are the plant available forms of P?
What are the challenges for P and soil fertility – both in
developed and developing countries?
What is the P Index?
Can you describe Figure 14.9 – P and pH?
Can you describe the mechanisms of P fixation – soil pH,
orders, soil colloids, etc.?
Why are organic forms of P important? Why are they more
likely to be lost to leaching than inorganic P?
Point Source vs Non-Point Source pollution
Why is erosion and runoff loss a greater issue than leaching of
P unlike N?
Define Eutrophication – why is it environmentally important?
What are some management strategies to manage soil P?
What is a buffer strip?
What role does K play in plant production?
What form of K is available for plant uptake?
What are the major additions and losses of K from the soil
system?
Task: View this topic
Activity Details
56. needed in atom level quantities, but without them
yields can and are limited? Chapter 14 finalizes our discussion
on the macro and micronutirents in soil, and
finishes with an important discussion on nutrient management.
Lecture content notes are accompanied by videos listed below
the notes in each submodule (e.g. Soil Calcium,
Magnesium, and Micronutrients (Chapter 15) Videos A thru C).
Print or download lecture notes then view
videos in succession alongside lecture content and add
additional notes from each video. The start of each
video is noted in parenthesis (e.g. Content for Video A) within
each lecture note set and contains lecture
content through the note for the next video (e.g. Content for
Video B).
Figures and tables unless specifically referenced are from the
course text, Nature and Property of Soils, 14th
Edition, Brady and Weil.
Content Video A
Soil Calcium, Magnesium, and Micronutrients
57. AGRI1050R50: Introduction to Soil Science (2020S) LH
https://gotoclass.tnecampus.org/d2l/le/content/8094442/navigate
Content/334/Previous?pId=60403329
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Content/334/Next?pId=60403329
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quickLink.d2l?ou=8094442&type=content&rcode=TBR-
23970628
https://gotoclass.tnecampus.org/d2l/home/8094442
3/29/2020 Soil Calcium, Magnesium, and Micronutrients
(Chapter 15) Notes - AGRI1050R50: Introduction to Soil
Science (2020S)
https://gotoclass.tnecampus.org/d2l/le/content/8094442/viewCo
ntent/60403434/View 2/7
http://caldwell.ces.ncsu.edu/2013/07/avoiding-blossom-end-rot/
Calcium and Magnesium
Macronutrients
58. Plants – Needed just under amounts of N,K
Calcium
Plants – Major component cell walls, growth, enzymes
Animals – Bones and teeth
Not generally a problem unless VERY acidic
Magnesium
Plants – Photosynthesis, enzymes, bridge for ATP
Animals – Grass Tetany
Not overly problematic – weathering/dissolution soil minerals
Availability linked to soil pH and amount of weathering
Lime – adds back from plant uptake/leaching
Calcium and Magnesium Cycles
Content Video B
Trace Element
Trace Element – Based on abundance in soils
< 100 mg/kg in soil solids or < 100 mol/L in soil solution
Micronutrient Nutrients required for plant growth but in small