Note: Sourcing from Wikipedia.  Consider the source.  
There is no such thing as organic nitrogen. Wikipedia or no.  There is 
industrial and non-industrial. The confusion on the meaning of words is just 
another symptom of the tower of babel dark ages we live in.  Sorry. 
 
 
The first law of ecology is that everything is related to everything else.  
Barry Commoner
 >>> Guy Serbin <guy.ser...@gmail.com> 7/26/2011 2:23 PM >>>
Not all compounds containing carbon are organic, even if their source
is biological.  For example, calcium carbonate (the primary component
of limestone) is usually biogenic, but is not considered to be
organic. Likewise pure carbon (graphite and diamonds), CO2, CO,
cyanides, carbonates, and carbides are considered to be inorganic
(note- I am sourcing this from Wikipedia, but it does look accurate).
Most organic compounds will contain carbon-hydrogen bonds.

Please note that many of the nastiest pollutants are classified as
organic chemicals, so let's not confuse them with organic agriculture.

Organic nitrogen sources would be from proteins, amino acids, or urea.

Best regards,
Guy

On Tue, Jul 26, 2011 at 3:07 PM, Karen Jones <k.jo...@uwinnipeg.ca> wrote:
> As one of those old fashioned people who thinks that a mistake in language 
> often reveals a mistake in thought, there is no such thing as 'organic' 
> nitrogen. There is nitrogen from industrial and non-industrial sources. 
> Anybody out there who has studied organic chemistry would tell us that 
> 'organic' means that a substance has carbon in it.  Please correct me if I am 
> mistaken.
>
>
>
> The first law of ecology is that everything is related to everything else.  
> Barry Commoner
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