Rural Economy, in Its Relations with Chemistry, Physics, and Meteorology, Or Chemistry Applied to AgricultureAppleton, 1854 - 507 Seiten |
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... motives , to which I was entirely a stranger , having prevented the project from being carried out , I made up my mind to publish , not the lectures such as I should have delivered them , but the documents which would have formed.
... motives , to which I was entirely a stranger , having prevented the project from being carried out , I made up my mind to publish , not the lectures such as I should have delivered them , but the documents which would have formed.
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Jean Baptiste Boussingault. delivered them , but the documents which would have formed the basis of my teaching . The first part of this work treats in succession of the physical and chemical phenomena of vegetation ; of the composition ...
Jean Baptiste Boussingault. delivered them , but the documents which would have formed the basis of my teaching . The first part of this work treats in succession of the physical and chemical phenomena of vegetation ; of the composition ...
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... formed of several essential parts : 1st . of the radicle ; 2d . of the gemmule , plumule , or rudiment of the stem , which by its extension engenders the organs that are to vegetate above the ground ; 3d . of cotyledons , which form the ...
... formed of several essential parts : 1st . of the radicle ; 2d . of the gemmule , plumule , or rudiment of the stem , which by its extension engenders the organs that are to vegetate above the ground ; 3d . of cotyledons , which form the ...
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... formed a certain angle with the circum- ference of the wheel . With a certain velocity , the roots were in- clined 10 ° below the horizontal plane in which the wheel moved , and the stems then formed an angle of the same magnitude above ...
... formed a certain angle with the circum- ference of the wheel . With a certain velocity , the roots were in- clined 10 ° below the horizontal plane in which the wheel moved , and the stems then formed an angle of the same magnitude above ...
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... formed by an assemblage of little adherent scales ; this is the cuticle , or epidermis , which encloses the entire vegetable . As it is extensible within certain narrow limits only , it gives way and cracks in proportion as the body of ...
... formed by an assemblage of little adherent scales ; this is the cuticle , or epidermis , which encloses the entire vegetable . As it is extensible within certain narrow limits only , it gives way and cracks in proportion as the body of ...
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Häufige Begriffe und Wortgruppen
acre agriculture albumen alkaline Alsace alumina ammonia analysis animals appears ascertained ashes atmosphere azote azotized principles Bechelbronn beet calcareous carbonate of lime carbonic acid cattle cent clay climate clover color composition contains course crop cultivation decomposition Ditto dried dung dwts earth effect elements equivalent evaporation experiments fact Fahr fattening fatty matter favorable fecula feet fermentation fertility forage formed germination gluten grain ground gypsed gypsum heat horse humus Hydrogen Jerusalem artichoke land leaves less lime magnesia maize manure mean temperature milk mineral moist moisture oats observations obtained oil-cake organic matter oxide oxygen Payen phosphate phosphoric acid pints plants potash potatoes produce proportion quantity rain roots rotation salts sand Saussure seed silica soda soil soluble solution starch straw substances sugar sulphate of lime sulphuric acid surface tion tissue trees urine vegetable weight wheat wood woody yield
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Seite 498 - In the year 1800, the population of this favored valley, where the cultivation of indigo, of cotton, of cocoa, and the cane had made immense progress, was as dense as it was in the most thickly populated districts of England or France, and every one was delighted with the appearance of comfort that prevailed in the numerous villages of this industrious country.
Seite 2 - ... were obtained, are displayed with such absolute perspicuity as to be intelligible and instructive to every agricultural inquirer, however superficial his previous acquaintance may be with the details of chemical science. Nothing from the pen of the Editor could throw additional light upon the Author's...
Seite 482 - In other words, the duration of the vegetation appears to be in the inverse ratio of the mean temperature ; so that if we multiply the number of days during which a given plant grows in different climates, by the mean temperature of each we obtain numbers that are very nearly equal. This result is not only remarkable in so far as it seems to indicate that upon every parallel of latitude, at all elevations above the level of the sea, the same plant receives in the course of its existence an equal...
Seite 482 - ... shorter as the mean temperature of the cycle itself is lower or higher. In other words, the duration of the vegetation appears to be in the inverse ratio of the mean temperature ; so that if we multiply the number of days during which a given plant grows in different climates, by the mean temperature of each we obtain numbers that are very nearly equal.
Seite 367 - ... vegetation which it contains, and that a time must come, when, without supplies of such mineral matters, the land would become unproductive from their abstraction In the neighborhood of large and populous towns, for instance, where the interest of the farmer and market-gardener is to send the largest possible quantity of produce to market, consuming the least possible quantity on the spot, the want 'of saline principles in the soil would very soon be felt, were it not that for every wagon-load...
Seite 1 - CONSIDERATIONS. Extract from Translator's Introduction. In the person of the distinguished author of this work the man of science is happily associated with the practical farmer — the accomplished naturalist, the profound chemist and natural philosopher, and friend and fellow-laborer of Arago, Biot, Dumas, and all the leading minds of his age and country — M.
Seite 1 - Bouissangault's title to consideration is recognised wherever letters and civilization have extended their influence. Surely, the collected and carefully recorded experience of such a man must have value in the estimation of every educated mind, and cannot fail to be especially welcome to that class of readers who are professionally engaged in the practical application of that noble science which his labors have contributed to illustrate and advance. The chemical portion...
Seite 5 - The interesting and ample instruction conveyed in the observations of this acute and profound observer upon the food and alimentary treatment of cattle of every species, accompanied as they are by minute details of the results obtained in the shape of organic and inorganic elements, cannot be too urgently recommended to the attentive consideration of every one interested in that important branch of rural economy to which they more particularly relate. The...
Seite 240 - So that during its transformation, the urea has gained 3.4 of hy drogen, and 26.6 of oxygen. In water the hydrogen is to the oxygen as 1 to 8. (: : 1 : 8.) Now it is precisely in this proportion that hydrogen and oxygen are found to be acquired by the urea in passing into the state of cabonate of ammonia ; whence it follows that the elements of wale are fixed in the process.