Balts was born in
Saint Petersburg in 1866. She became interested in biology and the field of soil science, eventually working at the
Soviet Academy of Sciences in Saint Petersburg and the
V.V. Dokuchaev Central Museum of Soil. In the 1920s, she became the director of the Museum of Soil Science. Specializing in soil structure, engineering geology and road construction, she attended several international conferences of soil scientists in the late 1920s. She also published a number of scientific works during this time.
Arrest In December 1930, Balts was arrested as part of a group of people considered to be antigovernmental agitators by the Soviet government. Although some authorities demanded her execution, she was sentenced to five years of forced labor at
Solovki prison camp, where she was able to continue her work as a soil scientist. She even took part in the work of the Northern Base of the USSR Academy of Sciences for the study of tundra and peat bogs near Arkhangelsk. Balts was released from prison in 1933 on account of her advanced age, though the Soviet government levied additional restrictions on her and suppressed her work. Balts then settled in
Arkhangelsk with her niece, Leontina Arturovna, and her husband. Balts and her family was eventually forced to move to
Syktyvkar. After the ration card for her niece and family was stolen, Balts gave them hers. She died in 1943 of
decompensated myocarditis brought on by starvation at 76. == References ==