WordPress WooCommerce Themes

Glauconite uses. A green mineral that works for the benefit of the soil for a long time

There are minerals that behave like “slow batteries” for the soil: they do not provide an instant “explosion” of nutrition, but they nourish the agroecosystem for a long time and stably and, at the same time, comprehensively improve soil properties.

Glauconite is such a mineral – in the world it is often called greensand (“green sand”) or greensand marl (“green marl”), because glauconite gives the rock a characteristic greenish hue.(dgs.udel.edu)

Glauconite

Glauconite is a natural potassium-containing iron silicate (more precisely: layered silicate/phyllosilicate, a “myco-like” mineral), which can contain not only K and Fe, but also Al and other impurities in the crystal lattice. In geological descriptions, greensand is directly defined as a rock consisting mainly of glauconite (in some deposits its share can exceed 90%), and the rest is mostly quartz. It is this mineral “matrix” that makes glauconite a non-synthetic, soft and long-lasting source of nutrients and related components for the soil. (dgs.udel.edu)

An important nuance is that in the soil, glauconite does not act as a “quick syrup,” but as a mineral reservoir of ions and a structural conditioner. A classic review of New Jersey soils emphasizes that the beneficial effect of glauconite soils is not limited to potassium alone; it is associated with a combination of factors – increased soil nutrient retention capacity (sorption capacity), relatively better moisture retention, and an overall “ameliorative” effect. That is, glauconite is a story about stabilizing fertility, not a one-time “crop adjustment.” (htc.issmge.org)

What is interesting: glauconite is of marine origin.

It forms in sedimentary marine deposits and is often associated with conditions where sediment accumulates slowly (or almost not at all) and there are specific reducing conditions. This is why glauconite is often found as “grains/pellets” in greenish sands and marls, which then become valuable for agriculture.

This point is well described in the geological and soil survey of greensand: glauconite is a mineral of marine origin, formed under conditions of slow sedimentation in a relatively shallow marine environment.(htc.issmge.org)

History from the classics to the era of mass chemicalization

Long before the modern potash fertilizer industry, farmers used glauconite marls as an available natural material to restore and enhance fertility.

In the United States, particularly in the New Jersey and Delaware regions, greensand has historically been used as an inexpensive material for fertilizing and conditioning soils: in Delaware, it is explicitly stated that “in the past” greensand was used as a cheap fertilizer, and now, after extraction, it is dried and used as a soil conditioner. (dgs.udel.edu)

In New Jersey, the “greensand” of glauconite soils has been known to be of agricultural value since colonial times, and 19th-century historical sources described how the application of greensand marl could elevate depleted lands to a “high state of improvement.”

Very specific agronomic practices are also given: for forage crops, grasses, and clover, it was recommended to spread greensand on the surface at rates of 100–400 bushels per acre (the same source gives a guideline of 5–20 tons/acre), and it was noted that yields often doubled, and sometimes increased many times. At the same time, in the early period of agricultural development in New Jersey, very “heavy” application rates were also encountered—tens of tons per acre, and in the mid-1880s, the scale of application of almost a million tons of greensand annually on farms in the state was described. (htc.issmge.org)

It is also interesting that greensand was not a purely local “American feature”. The same review mentions that soils enriched with glauconite were also noted as being of agricultural value in other countries (Europe, etc.), and in English examples they emphasized the high culture of agriculture on such lands and the role of the phosphate component in the best greensand soils. That is, historically, glauconite was perceived not as exotic, but as a rock resource of fertility, which simply lies underfoot where one is lucky with geology. (htc.issmge.org)

Why has interest returned now?

Today, attention to glauconite is returning to the world in the logic of sustainable agriculture, as modern scientific reviews directly consider glauconite sands as an alternative mineral source of potassium and trace elements, as a material capable of supporting more efficient water use (due to natural moisture-retaining properties), as well as as a basis for creating glauconite-containing “green” fertilizers of a new generation (including composites/nanocomposites). And the key idea there is very pragmatic, because glauconite has the potential as a local mineral alternative to some expensive and environmentally problematic solutions in nutrition systems — but the dosage and effect must always be “landed” on specific soils and crops. (ScienceDirect)

Glauconite is useful to an agronomist because it is not just potassium, but an entire “soil platform”

Imagine a material that simultaneously:

  • (1) provides nutrients gradually,
  • (2) enhances moisture and cation retention,
  • (3) brings iron + trace elements,
  • (4) adds a silicon component to the system, which is often associated with plant resistance to stress.

This is how modern literature describes the agricultural potential of glauconite and its derivatives (greensand, glauconite sandstones/siltstones) in the context of sustainable agriculture.

1) Potassium — but in a “smart,” slow format

The potassium in glauconite is “sewn” into the mineral matrix (layered silicate), so it is not released all at once, but rather as weathering/ion exchange occurs. This is a key difference from rapidly soluble K salts, where instead of a sharp peak in concentration in the soil solution, we get a more uniform supply. This mechanism is the reason why glauconite is considered a source of slow-release potassium.

The practical meaning for the field is simple – there is less risk of K loss on light soils due to leaching, because K does not “fall out” all at once into the solution, plus a better potassium background over a longer period, especially if the technology involves interphase “failures” in fertilization, when the effect often becomes stronger over time, when the mineral fraction has time to “include” in soil processes.

This is well illustrated by experiments with glauconite siltstone, where in a study of several consecutive cultivation cycles, greater effects were observed after repeated cycles, which the authors directly attribute to the long-term release of nutrients from the mineral matrix.

2) Silicon (Si) and soil “hardiness”

In glauconite rocks, the silicon (silicate) framework is significantly represented – hence the logic that glauconite and glauconite rocks are sometimes considered as a multicomponent complex source, where, along with K, potentially mobilized Si forms may be available, depending on the rock, grinding, biological activity, pH, etc.

It is now important for the agronomist to think about Si, since in modern reviews silicon is already recognized as an element that enhances plant resistance to abiotic stresses (drought, heat, salinity) and partly to biotic factors, through tissue strengthening and regulatory effects. In addition, silicon in the soil is not a “single molecule”, but a system of pools and flows; therefore, the real effect often depends on whether there are conditions conducive to Si mobilization, including microbiological mechanisms.

At the same time, even pure glauconite is not a pure “silicon fertilizer” like some artificial Si products. But as a mineral base that carries the Si framework and simultaneously stabilizes the soil solution, it fits well into the concept of sustainable nutrition + soil conservation.

3) Iron and trace elements — “biochemistry kit”

According to mineralogical studies, glauconite is an iron-potassium aluminosilicate and in different samples may contain Fe, Al, Mg, etc.

In terms of the form of iron, Fe³⁺ often dominates in the structure of glauconite, but in the Ukrainian deposit, Fe²⁺ is also noted in octahedral positions, where the ratio depends on the deposit, the conditions of formation and transformations. Therefore, it is correct to perceive that Ukrainian glauconite is a source of iron (Fe²⁺/Fe³⁺), which is agronomically significant, especially on soils with risks of chlorosis or with disturbed microelement nutrition.

In the applied analysis of the composition of glauconite (using the example of Egyptian samples) the presence of not only K and Mg/Na/Ca, but also trace elements such as Zn, Cu, Ni, Cr, Pb (the list and ratio depend on the raw material) is shown. And in the strategic materials on glauconite as an agromineral it is directly emphasized that it can carry a wide range of trace elements, which is why it is considered both a fertilizer and a soil conditioner.

What is important for Ukrainian glauconites is that they often act as polyelement raw materials. Thus, in a professional Ukrainian publication, glauconite is described as a mineral with a high content of potassium, phosphorus, divalent/trivalent iron, calcium, magnesium and B (boron), Cu (copper), V (vanadium), Mn (manganese), etc., up to 70 different trace elements.

For example, the trace element “profile” of Ukrainian glauconite depends on the specific deposit — and this is normal geochemistry. For example, for the Roztotsky district (Lviv region) in glauconite sands, an increased content of B and Zn is noted, while Mn, Cu and Co are described as low, and Mo was not detected in the samples.

The practical conclusion for an agronomist is simple – Ukrainian glauconite can be not only a source of K and Fe, but also a “silent” carrier of microelements, but specific emphasis is placed on B/Zn/Mn/Cu/Co, etc., and it is worth paying attention to the batch analysis of glauconite-containing fertilizer and the needs of the crop/soil.

4) Improving soil properties: structure, moisture, CEC

As a soil conditioner, glauconite works not only as a “source of elements,” but also as a mineral sorbent and structure builder. There are three key mechanisms here:

  • (a) Moisture retention. A classic review of greensand soils describes glauconite pellets as having a microporous structure, which is associated with an unusually high moisture retention capacity.
  • (b) Cation exchange capacity (CEC). A paper on K and metal release from glauconite minerals notes that glauconite components can affect soil CEC, and the literature provides CEC ranges for glauconite rocks/fractions (with variations depending on grain size and composition).
  • (c) Structural and chemical improvements in problem soils. More recent research (including open-access publications) directly links the use of glauconite materials to improvements in parameters such as structure, water retention, reduction of salinity/sodium under certain conditions, and overall “health” of the soil environment.

It is these “soil” effects that often give the best result in the long run: the harvest is the finale, and soil physics and sorption capacity are the stage, lighting, and sound.

Honesty is important (and that’s a plus, not a minus)

Glauconite is a long-term investment in fertility, which, when used with other components of organic, organomineral and complex fertilizers, shows the best result immediately and makes it a comprehensive continuation in time and action.

For example, if potassium deficiency is acute and an immediate response is required, readily available forms of K may be needed during the transition period — but it is highly desirable to have a stabilizing mineral matrix nearby that reduces losses and supports the soil system.

This is how modern reviews and strategic materials describe the role of glauconite as a source of K + soil conditioner, which allows building more sustainable nutrition systems.

We are betting on glauconite.

At GREENODIN GREEN, we make glauconite the “heart” of the formula not out of romance (although the green mineral looks as if it was drawn by elves), but out of soil engineering logic: glauconite is simultaneously a source of K, a carrier of trace elements and a soil conditioner, and its action is by its nature slow, stable, and cumulative. This is precisely what modern reviews and experimental works describe as one of the main advantages of glauconite in agricultural use.

What does “enriched glauconite” mean in our approach?

In GREENODIN GREEN fertilizer, we use enriched glauconite — that is, mineral raw materials selected and prepared to enhance precisely those properties that provide an agronomic effect in the field:

  • increased content of potassium (K) as a basic macronutrient,
  • a little phosphorus (P) for start and growth energy,
  • iron, with an emphasis on biologically significant forms (Fe²⁺/Fe³⁺ balance) in soil processes,
  • other trace elements,
  • active silicon as part of the mineral matrix.

This is not a “one-time salt,” but a mineral base that works longer in the soil and helps keep the nutrient regime more even. The idea is perfectly consistent with how glauconite is described in geological and agronomic sources: as a potassium-iron-aluminosilicate, which was historically used as both a fertilizer and a soil improver.

Why does this “combination” within GREENODIN GREEN work logically?

1) Potassium — slow, “smart”

Glauconite is often directly attributed to slow-release K sources. In practice, this means: fewer peaks in K concentration in the soil solution – and potentially fewer losses, plus a longer potassium background during critical phases.

An additional plus: in experiments with glauconite-containing rocks, the effects often intensified in subsequent cultivation cycles, which fits well with the nature of the mineral matrix (it “reveals” in more than one week).

2) Phosphorus is an “energy starter” for the root

Phosphorus is not just “another element.” It is critically linked to energy transfer, membrane function, and growth rate, and therefore to crop start-up and root system development, especially under stressful conditions.

And here is an important point: in the classic review of greensand soils, it is mentioned that some glauconite-containing deposits can also be rich in available Ca and P — that is, nature itself sometimes “combines” this pair (K + P) in one material.

3) Iron — biochemistry of respiration, chlorophyll, and enzymes

In soils, iron exists mainly as Fe³⁺ and Fe²⁺, and it is the availability (solubility) and the ability of the root to reduce Fe³⁺ to Fe²⁺ that are important for the plant. Scientific reviews explicitly emphasize that plants can absorb/use Fe²⁺, and Fe³⁺ is often poorly available due to low solubility.

Glauconite, as a potassium-iron-silicate mineral, naturally carries an iron component, so the logic of “supporting the trace element background” through the mineral matrix is ​​quite reasonable here.

4) Microelements — “auxiliary keys” to the harvest

Ukrainian sources separately emphasize: glauconite, available in Ukraine, is considered an alternative source of replenishing soil nutrients, and it is noted to contain a wide range of trace elements.

For Ukrainian glauconite-containing rocks, a special report/work on sites in the central and western regions of Ukraine directly mentions trace elements such as B, Mn, Co, Cu, Zn, Mo, etc. — with the composition and “accents” depending on the specific raw material/site.

And modern research goes even further: glauconite is considered as a basis for composite microfertilizers with Zn/Cu/B, where the mineral base itself acts as a carrier and controls the release.

5) Active silicon — stress resistance and plant “strength”

Silicon in modern agricultural science is increasingly described as a factor that can enhance resistance to drought, salinity, and other stresses by influencing physiology and antioxidant systems.

Glauconite rocks have also been investigated as a multi-element source, including Si (depending on the specific material), which for us is the logic of “active silicon as part of the mineral matrix”.

How to best test GREENODIN GREEN on your field

For fair and convincing evaluation, the best format is replicated strip trials with randomization/blocks. This is a standard approach for on-farm field comparisons that allows for the separation of “product effect” from “field spot effect.”

Practical and working test scheme:

  1. Control is your standard power system.
  2. Control + GREENODIN GREEN (the rate is agreed with the agronomist).
  3. Classical synthetic nutrition.
  4. Complex: Synthetics + GREENODIN GREEN

Recommendation for the quality of the experiment: 2-3 repetitions (replications) across the field, the same width of the strips for your equipment, the same timing and agronomic background.

In addition to the final yield, it is worth looking at “soil and plant markers” such as uniformity of development, root mass, stress response at critical phases; moisture, infiltration, structure (visual + simple field tests); soil analyses before/after, determining available K, P, pH, if possible CEC and trace elements.

Why this is important: Glauconite solutions often have a strong effect precisely because of the stabilization of soil properties and the “long” work of potassium, rather than a one-time impulse.

We are now offering GREENODIN GREEN for testing

Because glauconite best shows the result in real field conditions, that is, on your soil, under your crop, in your technological map. And a properly set up demo scheme does not give faith “at word”, but data that is pleasant to work with for both the agronomist and the owner. And we are pleased to work with your feedback.

Add comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked

Thermal depolymerization (TDP)

How thermal depolymerization (TDP) works and how it differs from pyrolysis. Processing of organic waste, sludge and plastic into oil and gas. ERVO modular plants for autonomous communities and agroclusters of Ukraine.

More "

The secret to sturdy seedlings with GRAY

How to get quality seedlings: the role of active silicon, humic acids and the microbiome. Scientific substantiation of the effect of GRAY biostimulants on the stockiness, stress resistance and survival of tomatoes, peppers and eggplants.

More "

Don't forget to share