British Farmer's Magazine, Ausgabe 14James Ridgway, 1849 |
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Seite 1
... Yorkshire . These strata are likewise found in Somersetshire and Devonshire . A more detailed description will be found in the accompanying paper ( p.10 ) . Westward of the range of Green Sand and of the fen land of Cambridgeshire and ...
... Yorkshire . These strata are likewise found in Somersetshire and Devonshire . A more detailed description will be found in the accompanying paper ( p.10 ) . Westward of the range of Green Sand and of the fen land of Cambridgeshire and ...
Seite 15
... Yorkshire to Sidmouth in along the Alps and Carpathian mountains . Devonshire ; appearing again in the Isle of Wight , North America these strata appear to be the equi- where the fossils are very abundant . In the north - valent of the ...
... Yorkshire to Sidmouth in along the Alps and Carpathian mountains . Devonshire ; appearing again in the Isle of Wight , North America these strata appear to be the equi- where the fossils are very abundant . In the north - valent of the ...
Seite 33
... Yorkshire , to Sidmouth , in Devonshire , and thence to the Isle of Wight , was rich in such fossils as he had mentioned . From communications which he had received , he felt convinced that beds of fossils were very numerous , and that ...
... Yorkshire , to Sidmouth , in Devonshire , and thence to the Isle of Wight , was rich in such fossils as he had mentioned . From communications which he had received , he felt convinced that beds of fossils were very numerous , and that ...
Seite 52
... Yorkshire or anywhere else , where landlords nets for killing quadrupeds , and neither hawks nor hounds and farmers live together in the mutual discharge of duty were in any risk of being used as ancillaries of sedition . and the common ...
... Yorkshire or anywhere else , where landlords nets for killing quadrupeds , and neither hawks nor hounds and farmers live together in the mutual discharge of duty were in any risk of being used as ancillaries of sedition . and the common ...
Seite 69
... Yorkshire by a small quantity of guano reduced to dug full 7 feet in diameter and 12 feet deep , the liquid ; 18 tons of hay , or 66 tons of grass , per acre , bottom being shaped like a basin and well rammed being the amount of produce ...
... Yorkshire by a small quantity of guano reduced to dug full 7 feet in diameter and 12 feet deep , the liquid ; 18 tons of hay , or 66 tons of grass , per acre , bottom being shaped like a basin and well rammed being the amount of produce ...
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acid acre agreement allowed ammonia animals appears barley beans bones breed bushels calves capital cattle CHAIRMAN chalk cheers Class clay cloudy cloudy Committee compensation corn crop cultivation custom disease districts ditto drainage draining drill dung effect England exhibiter expense extent farm farmer favour give grass green sand guano harrows harvest horse implement important improved and manufactured inches increase inoculation invented and manufactured iron labour land landlord lease lime Lincolnshire London Lord manure meeting ment month nitrogen Nottinghamshire oats omasum opinion pastures patent phosphate phosphoric acid plant plough portion potatoes practice premium present prize produce quantity rent Royal Agricultural Society Scotland season seed sheep soil sovs sowing supply tenant tenant-right tiles tillage tion turnips weather wheat Yorkshire
Beliebte Passagen
Seite 286 - Liverpool, in 1841, is thus noticed by the judges of the implements appointed by that Society : — •The Rev. WL Rham, of Winkfield, Berkshire, exhibited an implement, the principal object of which is to extend and improve the system of drilling and dibbling wheat, beans, &c.
Seite 32 - Well, gentlemen, I do not wish to take up any more of your time and thank you again for the honour you have done to me.
Seite 336 - That this distinction does not appear to be supported by any Bound reason ; and your Committee are of opinion that the tenant's privilege of removal, with respect "to fixtures, set up for trading purposes, should be extended to those erected for agricultural objects.
Seite 334 - That the law, with respect to things affixed to the freehold, is different and more beneficial as regards those annexations made for the purposes of trade than those made for the purposes of agriculture, an outgoing tenant being permitted, in many cases, to remove the former, when erected by himself, but not tho latter.
Seite 335 - That among such expenses are included the purchase of food for stock, the purchase of certain kinds of manure, and the draining, chalking, and marling of the soil; the result of all which outlays is, to effect an improvement of the soil, more or less lasting, and requiring more or less time to elapse before the increased productiveness, thereby obtained, reimburses the expenditure incurred.
Seite 59 - France by a mixture of apples and flour, in the proportion of one of the former to two of the latter. The...
Seite 5 - when the grass first springs above the surface of the earth, the chief constituent of its early blades is water, the amount of solid matter being comparatively trifling ; as its growth advances, the deposition of a more indurated form of carbon gradually becomes more considerable, the sugar and soluble matter at first increasing, then gradually diminishing, to give way to the deposition of woody substance...
Seite 6 - Grass in a dry State, are sufficiently obvious. By this means all the Constituents of the Grass are retained in a State of Integrity; the Sugar, by the Absence of Water, is protected from undergoing Decomposition, the...
Seite 159 - Agricultural Customs Committee " reported " that this wider system of compensation to the outgoing tenant seems to bo highly beneficial to agriculture, to the landlord, and to the farmer, to lead to a great increase in ,the productiveness of the soil, and to extended employment of the rural population.
Seite 23 - ... destitution, at, or near to, his own door. But, Sir, sad and lengthened experience has convinced me that the producer of bread by the sweat of his brow, for his body's sake and his soul's sake can be placed in no worse position than he is at home — in merry England (?), Christian England (?), England the nurse of industry, the very hot-bed of philanthropy (?). Late, very late, personal experience — knowledge acquired far and near from those in whom I can put trust — facts of which I am...