Transcript source
National-Soil-ArchiveTranscript
[Music plays and text appears: National Soil Archive]
[Image changes to show an outside shot of the CSIRO Australian National Soil Archive building]
Peter Wilson: I’m Peter Wilson and I’m the manager of the Australian National Soil Archive here at CSIRO.
[Image changes to show Peter Wilson]
The archive holds over 70,000 soil samples from across Australia.
[Image changes to show Peter opening an archive drawer and removing a jarred sample]
These samples have been collected by CSIRO research and all of the Australian State and Territory Soil Agencies. These samples represent all of the landscapes across Australia be some from farmland and some from the arid interior.
[Image changes back to Peter]
Our earliest samples come from 1924; they were done before modern agriculture in Australia and before widespread use of fertilisers and before atomic testing, so they’re really special little time capsules of the way the soil was before we’ve started to have impact on it.
[Image changes to show a woman sorting collected samples into jars]
The samples have now been used to help map the soil carbon stocks across Australia using new infrared scanning technology. They’ve also been reanalysed using new techniques to look at soil property change over time. Even the Federal Police have used them for some forensic investigations.
[Image changes back to Peter]
CSIRO has had the National Soil Archive for about ten years or so.
[Image changes to show shelves of jarred soil samples]
We’ve filled up the old archive and we’ve just built a new facility, so this new one is all modern labs and modern storage facilities and we can hold up to 124,000 samples in the new archive.
[Image changes to show Peter at the archive drawers and then changes back to Peter]
The archive samples have been analysed at different times and all of those results are loaded into our National Soil Database.
[Image changes to show a woman seated in front of a computer reviewing information]
This data is now available through the Australian Soil Resource Information System online and we also make it available through CSIRO’s SoilMapp for iPad.
[Image changes back to Peter]
Look, soil really is the complex natural medium that supports all life on our planet. Without soil we don’t have life, so it cycles our nutrients, our water, all of our biology and biodiversity. It’s obviously important to food, we grow all of our agricultural crops in soils, so managing those soils and using them sustainably is very important to the future generations.
[Music plays and CSIRO logo appears with text: Big ideas start here www.csiro.au]