Soil Fertility & Human Health — The Albrecht Papers, Volume 3The health of people begins with the health of the soil.
In Soil Fertility & Human Health, pioneering soil scientist Dr. William A. Albrecht expands his foundational work beyond plants and animals to reveal the direct connection between soil fertility, nutrient density, and human health. His research demonstrates that when soils are depleted of essential minerals and biological activity, the food grown on them cannot fully nourish the body.
Through a series of scientific papers and field observations, Albrecht explains how balanced soil minerals, trace elements, and soil biology influence the nutritional quality of crops and the long-term health outcomes of populations. He challenges the conventional focus on yield alone, showing instead that true agricultural success depends on soil health management and mineral balance.
This volume provides a deeper understanding of how degenerative health conditions, poor nutrition, and declining food quality can often be traced back to imbalanced soils. Today, Albrecht’s work stands as a cornerstone of regenerative agriculture principles and ecological farming systems, offering a roadmap for producing truly nutrient-dense food.
Who This Book Is For- Farmers focused on producing nutrient-dense food
- Health-conscious readers interested in food quality and nutrition
- Agronomists and soil consultants studying mineral balance
- Regenerative agriculture practitioners
- Nutritionists connecting soil health to human health outcomes
- Anyone questioning the link between modern food and declining health
Topics Included- Soil fertility and human nutrition
- Mineral balance and nutrient density in crops
- Trace elements and their role in human health
- Soil depletion and degenerative disease
- Biological soil function and food quality
- The limitations of yield-focused agriculture
- Regenerative approaches to restoring soil and health
Dr. William A. Albrecht, professor of soils at the University of Missouri College of Agriculture, was first a student of nature, and his greatest credential was that Nature accepted his findings, worked with them, and delivered much of American agriculture from the bondage of ignorance. Dr. Albrecht traveled widely and studied soils worldwide. "You have to have a vision," Dr. Albrecht used to say. "Unless you do, nature will never reveal herself." And such a vision he had. He showed that you need to feed the soil, not the plant. That animal health stems from the soil. And he developed base-level requirements for soil nutrients, formulas used to this.