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History of Technology 3: The Green Revolution 12 Views
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Description:
Today, we're tackling the Green Revolution. We hope you didn't wear white clothes...that'll be a tough stain to get out.
Transcript
- 00:00
Shmoop! Agriculture, well between 1960 and 1980 the world's green
- 00:06
production almost doubled. So what happened? [Screams and people running] How did we go from "oh no
- 00:11
agricultural productivity has limits whatever shall we do" to shoot
- 00:18
"we sure are glad there aren't any limits to agriculture let's eat a million
- 00:22
potatoes to celebrate." Yeah well a little something on the green revolution happened little John Wayne and
Full Transcript
- 00:29
[colonial man on farm] no that doesn't refer to the vegetable
- 00:33
revolutionaries taking over the world. Are there vegetable revolutionaries? Oh we
- 00:38
digress. Well the Green Revolution referred to a
- 00:41
bunch of technological and ideological changes between 1940 and 1970 that increased
- 00:45
agricultural productivity by leaps and bounds which is cool but definitely not
- 00:50
[guy riding corncob in grass field] as cool as an army of vegetable revolutionaries riding giant ears of
- 00:54
corn into battle. Don't tell us that's impossible. Anyway
- 00:58
some industrialized countries developed new farming technologies and decided to
- 01:02
spread them around the world. They did it partly because they were worried about
- 01:06
world's hunger and partly because they were terrified that hungry people would
- 01:10
turn to communism. Which is almost as scary as a hunger.
- 01:15
[Airplane flying over green house] Well the Green Revolution was super successful the whole world transition
- 01:19
toward more industrial agriculture and global yields or the amount of food per
- 01:24
acre went way way up. Why? Because things like pesticides, higher yielding kinds of
- 01:30
crops, large-scale irrigation and herbicides made fields more productive [plane spraying crops]
- 01:36
than ever before. Except there's one tiny little hitch or several hitches. It was
- 01:41
actually hitch city. First that's pesticides and herbicides are dangerous and it
- 01:46
turns out that putting chemical poisons on our food can have some really bad side [snow white eating poison apple]
- 01:50
effects. Wow, big shocker yeah. Second native crops disappeared, new high
- 01:57
yielding crops were all the rage so cool native varieties started to go the way
- 02:01
of the dodo bird. Finally farming use to be free and well it
- 02:06
wasn't entirely free but most farmers around the world had very limited tools
- 02:09
and they saved seed from their crops each year to plant in the spring. [Man spreading seeds in field]
- 02:13
Well in industrial agriculture farmers have to buy pesticides, herbicides, seeds and
- 02:18
machines. Small farmers ended up deeply in debt. Plus higher yields cause
- 02:23
the price of food to drop those small farmers couldn't always remake the money
- 02:28
they'd spent. Well on the bright side they had a nice big empty space to cry
- 02:33
on. But one of the first big movers and shakers of the Green Revolution was a
- 02:38
guy named Fritz Haber, he was a genius chemist who realized that we could bust
- 02:43
up the nitrogen carbon in the air by putting it in a tank and subjecting it
- 02:48
to a lot of heat and pressure. Well to be fair you can bust up any party that way.
- 02:52
Then we add hydrogen into the mix and eventually the molecular bonds pop. The
- 02:58
nitrogen and hydrogen bond together and we get a trickle of ammonia.
- 03:03
[scientist in lab] Well ammonia is super toxic but it can be broken down and used for anything and all
- 03:08
of our nitrogen needs. It can even be made into fertilizer. But with that the
- 03:13
world's nitrogen problems were basically over. While farmers no longer had to
- 03:17
worry about exhausting the nitrogen in their soil they could just replant same
- 03:21
crop year after year crammed with nitrogen and always good. Well they could
- 03:25
also plant crops in poor quality soil that had never been farmed before,
- 03:29
because all they had to do was toss the nitrogen at it and well something grew.[plants growing in dirt field next to father and son]
- 03:35
Well the Haber process was cheap and effective and a good long-term solution
- 03:39
since we are never going to run out of air. If we run out of air
- 03:44
we got bigger problems on our hands. We got to call Elon Musk and get a ride to Mars or something. [man coughing and passing out]
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