Russlands Bodenkunde in der Welt Eine ost-westliche Transfergeschichte 1880-1945 / Jan Arend.
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TextPublisher: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, Description: 1 online resource (1 p.)ISBN: 9783666301124Subject(s): History / Europe | HistoryGenre/Form: Electronic books.Online resources: View this content on Open Research Library. Summary: In the summer of 1914, the Russian agricultural scientist and soil scientist Konstantin Glinka sent a manuscript to Berlin. It contained the first presentation of Russian Soil Science, an early ecology doctrine of the soil, based on black soil research, to a foreign readership. This was the beginning of a success story: the Russian soil science was successful in the interwar period in Europe and the United States. After 1945, she became a classic of modern agricultural and environmental sciences. Jan Arend tells the story of knowledge transfer from east to west. It follows scientists, manuscripts and terms - from the black earth provinces of the Russian Empire to the podiums of international conferences to the cabinets of American agricultural planners and land estimators in Nazi Germany.
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In the summer of 1914, the Russian agricultural scientist and soil scientist Konstantin Glinka sent a manuscript to Berlin. It contained the first presentation of Russian Soil Science, an early ecology doctrine of the soil, based on black soil research, to a foreign readership. This was the beginning of a success story: the Russian soil science was successful in the interwar period in Europe and the United States. After 1945, she became a classic of modern agricultural and environmental sciences. Jan Arend tells the story of knowledge transfer from east to west. It follows scientists, manuscripts and terms - from the black earth provinces of the Russian Empire to the podiums of international conferences to the cabinets of American agricultural planners and land estimators in Nazi Germany.
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