Alex asked for a quick bit on how soils can be made organically fertile from a nuthin'-but-sand start. I willl go him one better and talk about how Nature does it from scratch; on bare parent soils, in other words, rock...
How do we start from that hard barren rock, be it an old cliff face or new volcanic spew? Simple, we do what we always do in organic gardening, we add humus...

The first guys we would want to encourage would be lichens, who's microroots, along with the first weathering, begin to work into the surface of the rock, fissuring it and speeding surface decay. As the lichens die off and mix their bodies into the decaying rock, we begin to get our first minimal layer of soil, at it's most highly bacterial state (very little fungus at this point). But that thin layer of soil is enough for our first plant material, mosses, who begin to add both their detritus and rooting actions, and the whole spectrum of plant biology begins to pick up, including our first fungal hyphae. But we still have a very bacterial soil, with fungal to bacterial ratios around 1 to 100...
The next level we bgin to get our first vascular plants; early grasses and weeds; the kind that show up in any profoundly disturbed site, be it volcanic slope or bulldozed plot (for Nature does not care how the soil was disturbed, simply that we were knocked back to the start). They begin to develop fungal associations with mycorrhizae and develop an area of high fungal/bacterial activity around their roots called the rhizosphere, and our F/B ratio increases to around 1 to 10. Still this is a more nitrate rich soil as bacterial soils tend to have higher levels of nitrogen and not a lot of plant use yet. Keep that in mind; high nitrogen, low oxygen soils are what weeds like... but as these weeds die their roots, high in carbon, decompose into the soil. We start to shift the carbon to nitrogen ratio towards carbon, and fungal decomposers are far more suited to carbon breakdown than bacteria...the tide starts to swing...
Now as we add more species and continue our shift to a fungal soil, we start to see some plants of use in the mix. As F/B gets toward 3 to 10, we start to see turf grass doing well. Our soil is getting more aeration as fungal hyphae and roots bolstered by mycorrhizal assocations probe deeper and open soils to gas and water exchange. Our soil continues to get better...
Now we are at a 7 to 10 F/B, and the soil begins to support some grains and our hardier veggies. The organic content of our soil is around 5%, and we are in the happy place for growing most veggies, As we get near 1 to 1 F/B, most any veggies, annuals, row crops and hardier turf is going to thrive for us, but trees and shrubs will still struggle...This range suits Man just fine, but it is not Nature's final goal; Mother wants everything forested, so we press on...
At 2 to 1 F/B, the shrubs start to show up and as we increase towards the higher ratios we get more and more woody plants including trees. At 5:1 the trees are adding more and more carbon to the soils (wood and brown leaves are high carbon inputs), they become more and more suited for fungal growth and less so for bacterial...
As we shift our F/B above 5:1 we start to see more and more tree species and as we get above 100:1, our first evergreens showing up. This is Natures goal for most temperate ecosystems; to reach a climax forest of evergreens...
So as organic gardeners the best bet is to move the system along to the place we want it for our crop, and then hold it there through manipulation of available chemicals. By shifting our soil near to that 1:1 F/B, we have the place we need for veggies, perennials and lawns. But how do we get that?
By interrupting the cycle anywhere AFTER the 1:1 F/B. Nature interrupts herself all the time; forest fires, floods, buffalo or wildebeest hooves times a million, all these set us back a succesional level or more. By simply adding in bacterial cultures and fungal structure, we reestablish the natural cycle of soil and interrupt at that perfect place on the cyle for humans. If we add too much carbon we assist MOther in the successioanl chain to the detriment of our own crops. If we interrupt the cycle with chemical applications, we kill fungal structure first, promoting a high nitrogen soil with less oxygen. Who likes that soil best? Weeds. SO why should we be suprised when they show up?
Sure nitrogen fertilizer short-cuts the system and feeds the plants directly without bacterial or fungal systems like Mother does, but it acts on the succesional biology in the same fashion as that fire or flood. Now the plant becomes reliant on the fertilizer and begins to lose some of the diversity of nutrient it was recieveing in the natural system. There's a problem, and pesticides are used; another successional level lost. The plant is weakened further and a fungal problem arises; another chemical, and another level lost. This vicious cycle continues as we slide back to what is for Nature's purposes an early succesional soil...
For those who think I'm barking mad, you are correct, but this is all true anyway...

[url]https://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m2120/is_n8_v75/ai_16541430/pg_2/?tag=content;col1[/url]
And for a bit on how organisms in soil don't just release nutrition they ARE the nutrients...first we get bacteria and fungii eaten by protozoas and such... (Alex, this first article is the meat and potatoes of what I've been talking about...)
[url]https://www.jstor.org/pss/1942528[/url]
then the the bigger nematodes eat all them...
[url]https://plpnemweb.ucdavis.edu/Nemaplex/Ecology/fertil.htm[/url]
And then the worms eat the nematodes and the rest as well...
[url]https://soil.scijournals.org/cgi/content/full/68/1/116[/url]
And bada bing, bada boom, youse got plant nutrition...
Questions?
HG