| Royal Agricultural Society of England - 1853 - 618 Seiten
...Sheep seemed to indicate — namely, that, as our current fattening food-stuffs go, both the amount consumed by a given weight of animal, within a given time, and that required to produce a given amount of increase, bear a much closer relationship to the amounts... | |
| Chemical Society (Great Britain) - 1866 - 556 Seiten
...under cover, more of the sewaged than of the unsewaged, reckoned in the fresh or green state, was both consumed by a given weight of animal within a given time, and required to produce a given weight of increase; but of real dry or solid substance, less of that of... | |
| Journal of the Royal Agriculture Society fo England - 1853 - 618 Seiten
...on Sheep seemed to indicate—namely, that, as our current fattening food-stuffs go, both the amount consumed by a given weight of animal, within a given time, and that required to produce a given amount of increase, bear a much closer relationship to the amounts... | |
| 1854 - 502 Seiten
...identical amounts of the dry substance of the starch and sugar thus tried against each other had both been consumed by a given weight of animal within a given time, and been required to yield a given weight of increase. The practical identity in feeding value, which had,... | |
| 1855 - 424 Seiten
...powerful to work thirty or forty acres, or even 100 acres, a day. The former machine would, if required, deposit the seed and roll the land at one and the...illustration of some of the points brought forward 12* in the former one ; but they had been arranged with reference to certain practical questions as... | |
| 1855 - 424 Seiten
...iron, besides zinc, copper, and other metals to the extent of two or three per cent. — Proc. Britinh Association, ON THE EQUIVALENCY OF STARCH AND SUGAR...as well as to the more scientific bearings of the subjecl. Thus, those interested in the growth of sugar had long wished to obtain the introduction of... | |
| 1855 - 802 Seiten
...constituents, which measured both the amounts consumed by a given weight of animal, within a given time, nnd the amount of increase obtained from a given weight...points brought forward in the former one; but they hod been arranged with reference to certain practical questions as well as to the more scientific bearings... | |
| Charles W. Vincent, James Mason - 1855 - 314 Seiten
...dry substance of the starch and sugar, which had thus been tried against each other, had been both consumed by a given weight of animal within a given time, and required to yield a given weight of increase. The identity, therefore, in feeding value, which had,... | |
| 1855 - 424 Seiten
...dry substance of the starch and sugar, which had ethus been tried against each other, had been both consumed by a given weight of animal within a given time, and required to yield a given weight of increase. The identity, therefore, in feeding value, which had,... | |
| British Association for the Advancement of Science - 1855 - 764 Seiten
...to shoiv, that all but identical amounts of the dry substance of Cane-Sugar and of Starch are both consumed by a given weight of animal within a given time, and are required to yield a given weight of increase. The practical identity in feeding value, which from... | |
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