BrentOntario - 2/9/2020 21:22
I've posted this before, but this time it's 50 years old this month. Illustrations from a two-page spread from the February 1970 issue of National Geographic; from an article titled "The Revolution in American Agriculture".
"Farm of the Future: Grainfields stretch like fairways and cattle pens resemble high-rise apartments in a farm of the early 21st century, , as portrayed by artist Davis Meltzer with the guidance of U.S. Department of Agriculture specialists.
Attached to a modernistic farmhouse, a bubble-topped control tower hums with a computer, weather reports, and a farm-price ticker tape. A remote-controlled tiller-combine glides across a 10-mile-long wheat field on tracks that keep the heavy machine from compacting the soil. Threshed grain, funneled into a pneumatic tube beside the field, flows into storage elevators rising close to the distant city. The same machine that cuts the grain prepares the land for another crop. A similar device waters neighboring strips of soybeans as a jet-powered helicopter sprays insecticides.
Across a service road, conical mills blend feed for beef cattle, fattening in multilevel pens that conserve ground space. Tubes carry the feed to be mechanically distributed. A central elevator transports the cattle up and down, while a tubular side drain flushes wastes to be broken down for fertilizer. Beside the further pen, a processing plant packs beef into cylinders for shipment to market by helicopter and monorail. Illuminated plastic domes provide controlled environments for growing high-value crops such as strawberries, tomatoes, and celery. Near a distant lake and recreation area, a pumping plant supplies water for the vast operation."
I like the "sky" office to over see all the field operations. That crop duster chopper/plane is HUGE, as is the chopper to carry the processed beef away. Be interesting to see a new 50yr prediction from today, with illustration ?