Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society of England, Volum 14Royal Agricultural Society of England, 1853 Vols. for 1933- include the societys Farmers' guide to agricultural research. |
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... EXPERIMENTS , AND TO DISTRIBUTE THE EXECUTION OF THESE AMONG THEIR MEMBERS . VON THAER , Principles of Agriculture . LONDON - Printed by WILLIAM CLOWES and SoNs , Stamford Street . 77271 54 CONTENTS OF PART I. , VOL , XIV . ARTICLE Sci ...
... EXPERIMENTS , AND TO DISTRIBUTE THE EXECUTION OF THESE AMONG THEIR MEMBERS . VON THAER , Principles of Agriculture . LONDON - Printed by WILLIAM CLOWES and SoNs , Stamford Street . 77271 54 CONTENTS OF PART I. , VOL , XIV . ARTICLE Sci ...
Side 15
... Experiments with Nitrate of Soda , Guano , & c . By Lieut . - Col . Sir J. M. TYLDEN . To Mr. Pusey . SIR , -I was so much struck with the importance of the experi- ment detailed by you in the twenty - seventh Number of the Royal ...
... Experiments with Nitrate of Soda , Guano , & c . By Lieut . - Col . Sir J. M. TYLDEN . To Mr. Pusey . SIR , -I was so much struck with the importance of the experi- ment detailed by you in the twenty - seventh Number of the Royal ...
Side 16
... experiments are not so great as they otherwise would have been : - periment . No. of Ex- Manure Used . Cost per Acre . 8 . Yield of Corn per Half of of Wheat Weight Increase Weight of Straw per Acre Straw in lbs . per Bushel . lbs ...
... experiments are not so great as they otherwise would have been : - periment . No. of Ex- Manure Used . Cost per Acre . 8 . Yield of Corn per Half of of Wheat Weight Increase Weight of Straw per Acre Straw in lbs . per Bushel . lbs ...
Side 30
... experiment to show the advantage of such application . The noble crop of wheat may be owing to other causes - to the ... experiments , but satisfy themselves with the eye , and are content without pocket proof . On the farm of James ...
... experiment to show the advantage of such application . The noble crop of wheat may be owing to other causes - to the ... experiments , but satisfy themselves with the eye , and are content without pocket proof . On the farm of James ...
Side 55
... , and every other item , showed a small profit besides all the manure . 4 pigs , 11 months old , made 331. at 5s . 6d . per stone . The experiments of Mr. Cavendish are very interesting and valuable Farming of Derbyshire . 55.
... , and every other item , showed a small profit besides all the manure . 4 pigs , 11 months old , made 331. at 5s . 6d . per stone . The experiments of Mr. Cavendish are very interesting and valuable Farming of Derbyshire . 55.
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Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society of England Royal Agricultural Society of England Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1866 |
Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society of England, Volum 16;Volum 41 Royal Agricultural Society of England Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1880 |
Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society of England Royal Agricultural Society of England Uten tilgangsbegrensning - 1869 |
Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
acid acre ad libitum agricultural ammonia amount animals average barley Bean and Lentil bitum Bran bred breed bushels butter cattle clay clover contain corn cost cows crop cultivation Derbyshire disease district Ditto drainage drains drilled East Lothian effect engine ewes experiments farm farmers fattened Fatty Matter favourable feet fibre flax flesh-forming furrow given grass guano hereditary Herefordshire horses improvement inches increase Indian meal inoculation Keythorpe labour land Leicester lentil meal less libitum lime limestone loam machine manure marl Matter consumed months-old nature nitrate nitrate of soda nitric acid nitrogenous non-nitrogenous oats obtained pasture period plant Pleuro-pneumonia ploughed portion potash practice Prize produce proportion quantity rivers rock salt seeds Series Shearling sheep silica soda soil soluble SOVEREIGNS sowing sown straw superphosphate tion Total turnips usually weight wheat winter yards
Populære avsnitt
Side 419 - To make two blades of grass grow where but one grew before is the secret of agricultural wealth.
Side 252 - England under the name of the " new disease," by the virulence of which thousands of cattle are carried off annually, and against which all medical aid has up to this period proved insufficient to check its infectious ravages, I have not lost sight of this important question, and the various improvements which longer experience has introduced into this new system; and I consider that I should be failing in my duty if I did not call your Lordship's attention to a report which has been forwarded to...
Side 113 - ... stallions, into the pasture grounds. It is constantly observed that these horses become the sires of a race to which the ambling pace is natural and requires no teaching.
Side 212 - Having brought my subject through the first period of its technical history, the preparation of the fibre, I may perhaps be permitted to say a few words on the state of the flax industry generally in our own and in other countries, from some of which we draw annually large supplies of fibre. In England, in 1851, the Factory Inspectors...
Side 111 - ... is as applicable to faulty and disproportioned as to beautiful and symmetrical form, to diseased and debilitated as to healthy and vigorous constitution, to gentle and tractable as to fiery and indomitable disposition. The size, weight, general appearance, expression of countenance, fleetness, and temper of the horse are all hereditary. Many illustrations might be given of particular families being remarkable, during several generations, for good or bad points, as for well...
Side 538 - Pigs — if we consider that it is the results obtained under the subtle agency of animal life, that we are seeking to measure and express in figures — and if we also bear in mind the various sources of modification to which our actual figures must be submitted, in order to attain their true indications, we think...
Side 225 - I united with animals of another mixed breed, picking out the best I could find on the borders of La Beauce and Touraine, which blended the Tourangelle and native Merino blood of those other two districts.
Side 220 - The lambs thrive, wear a beautiful appearance, and complete the joy of the breeder No sooner are the lambs weaned than their strength, their vigour, and their beauty begin to decay At last the constitution gives way .... he remains stunted for life : " the constitution being thus proved unstable or unadapted to the requirements. How, then, did M.
Side 526 - ... consumed by a given weight of animal, within a given time, and the amount of increase obtained from a given weight of food.