A farming technique practised for centuries by villagers in West
Africa, which converts nutrient-poor rainforest soil into fertile
farmland, could be the answer to mitigating climate change and
revolutionising farming across Africa.
A global study, led by the
University of Sussex, which included anthropologists and soil scientists
from Cornell, Accra, and Aarhus Universities and the Institute of
Development Studies, has for the first-time identified and analysed rich
fertile soils found in Liberia and Ghana.
They discovered that
the ancient West African method of adding charcoal and kitchen waste to
highly weathered, nutrient poor tropical soils can transform the land
into enduringly fertile, carbon-rich black soils which the researchers
dub 'African Dark Earths'.
From analysing 150 sites in northwest
Liberia and 27 sites in Ghana researchers found that these highly
fertile soils contain 200-300 percent more organic carbon than other
soils and are capable of supporting far more intensive farming.
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