Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society of England, Volume 13Royal Agricultural Society of England, 1852 |
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Página 26
... consumed 28 lbs . of hay , 24 lbs . of oatmeal , and 8 lbs . of bean flour . The evening's milk amounted to 4 quarts = 10 34 lbs . ; specific gravity , 1 · 034 . 23.160 grammes gave― Casein Butter Sugar Ashes Water In 100 parts . 1.262 ...
... consumed 28 lbs . of hay , 24 lbs . of oatmeal , and 8 lbs . of bean flour . The evening's milk amounted to 4 quarts = 10 34 lbs . ; specific gravity , 1 · 034 . 23.160 grammes gave― Casein Butter Sugar Ashes Water In 100 parts . 1.262 ...
Página 27
... consumed 14 lbs . of hay , and 30 lbs . of potatoes ( steamed ) , she gave in the evening 5 quarts of milk = 13 · 18 lbs . ; specific gravity , 1.030 . 18.141 grammes yielded— Casein Butter Sugar Ashes Water In 100 parts . 0.716 3.9 ...
... consumed 14 lbs . of hay , and 30 lbs . of potatoes ( steamed ) , she gave in the evening 5 quarts of milk = 13 · 18 lbs . ; specific gravity , 1.030 . 18.141 grammes yielded— Casein Butter Sugar Ashes Water In 100 parts . 0.716 3.9 ...
Página 29
... consumed by the oxygen of the air . In the stall , the respirations of an animal are much less frequent than in the ... consumes it ; all good dairymen allow the cows to walk home at their own pace , and never accelerate it . When a cow ...
... consumed by the oxygen of the air . In the stall , the respirations of an animal are much less frequent than in the ... consumes it ; all good dairymen allow the cows to walk home at their own pace , and never accelerate it . When a cow ...
Página 30
... consumed by the animal in the course of the exercise requisite to procure its food , & c .; when fed in the house with the like food , the butter was necessarily yielded in greater pro- portion , consequently formed a rich fat cheese ...
... consumed by the animal in the course of the exercise requisite to procure its food , & c .; when fed in the house with the like food , the butter was necessarily yielded in greater pro- portion , consequently formed a rich fat cheese ...
Página 53
... consumed about 8 tons of mangel - wurzel per acre with sheep upon the land , giving them a small quantity of corn . The land was then ploughed very thin , and directly afterwards scarified 7 inches deep twice over , and rolled down ...
... consumed about 8 tons of mangel - wurzel per acre with sheep upon the land , giving them a small quantity of corn . The land was then ploughed very thin , and directly afterwards scarified 7 inches deep twice over , and rolled down ...
Outras edições - Ver tudo
Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society of England Royal Agricultural Society of England Visualização integral - 1866 |
Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society of England, Volume 16;Volume 41 Royal Agricultural Society of England Visualização integral - 1880 |
Journal of the Royal Agricultural Society of England Royal Agricultural Society of England Visualização integral - 1869 |
Palavras e frases frequentes
acre agricultural Alumina ammonia amount animals average barley beans Boussingault bred breed bushels butter Carbonic Acid carrots casein cattle cent Chloride churn clay clover commencement consumed contained corn Cotswold Cotswold Sheep cows cream crop cultivation Cumberland districts double silicate drainage draining drilled exhibitors experiment farm farmers feeding feet Fromberg grains grass guano horses improved inches increase inoculation Johnston labour land Leiston Liebig lime limestone live weight machine Magnesia manufactured manure meadow Messrs milk Nesbit nitrate of soda nitrogen Number of Analyses oats obtained Organic Matter pasture Payen Phosphoric Acid plants plough portion potash prize produce proportion quantity river Nene roots salts season seed sheep silicate soil soluble Sorby SOVEREIGNS sown Spittlegate Sprengel stone straw stream subsoil sugar Sulphuric Acid surface Sussex Sussex sheep swedes tenant trace turnips wheat
Passagens conhecidas
Página 243 - During the years of scarcity at the end of the last and beginning of the present century...
Página 142 - ... that given in the last column. The fact is, that there is an almost unlimited supply of the mineral requisites of plants in soils, but that the great agricultural problem is to get at them — to render them available ; and here again it seems reasonable to suppose that abundant cultivation, which lets in carbonic acid and ammonia to the soil, may by that very act be providing the potash and phosphate of lime which the former, and the silica which the latter, are endowed with the power of dissolving,...