INDEX. 



Lincoln crowded with Commons, 



i>ime — limertone common in the High 

 lands of Pcrtnfliire, 192— plan 'or 

 bruifing: it unbunit, fraflrated, 193 

 — utility of lime in fome foils, 425 

 —life of it in Yorkftiire, 3S7— on 

 Summer-fallow, ib.— in what pro 

 portion, ih. — with what other ma- 

 nure, ib. — difTerent kmds, ib — Pon- 

 trefa>ft lime, how mixed, ib. — Error 

 with regard to its acflual fertility, 

 J388 — to be confidercd as an excit- 

 ing, not an enrichitijr manure, ac- 

 corrlv.ifr to fome writers, ib — how 

 to be ufed, and on what foils, 3S9 

 — moft beneficial mode of liminjj 

 land, 148 — errors of the Yorklhire 

 lime-hufbandry, 149, 



M 



JMachine (winnowing) introduced,I58 

 — '■hrilhing, ib. 



Memorial Claims, (obfervations on) 

 a66, 18, 23 — entimeraied and ex- 

 amined — game — fu't and fervice — 

 mill-fokes — compion land^- — mine- 

 rals — Courts leet, and Courts baron, 



Manufacturers, thofe treated of by 

 Middleton in his furvey, 84— ex- 

 cellent Agriculture in Lancafhire, 

 246. 



Manures, thofe laid upon meadows in 

 Middlefex, 80 — different modes of 

 procuring, 402. 



Jilalt liquors (immenfe confumption 

 of) in I^ondon, 83. 



Markets, (flate of the Edinburgh, 

 Hadfling;ton, &c.)— See Agricultu- 

 ral Intelligence in each No. 



Mtailows, watering of, finely under- 

 flood in Wiitfhirc, 318. Theory of 

 ■water-meadows, 319, 



—Nature and properties of, ib.— flow- 

 ing and catchwork meadows dc- 

 fcribed, 320, 322. 



— Quantity of watered meadows in 

 Wiltfhirc, ib. — not unhealthy — ad- 

 var.ragtR great, 323 — managcnient 

 of, 324 — feedifg of with (heep,325 

 —laid up for hay, 326 — kind of 

 hay ib. — what foils fie for water- 

 meadows, 327. 



Millfokes or multures, a part of ma- 

 norial claims, 266. 



Minerals, one of the manorial clr'^ni!. 



266, 23 — an important article iq 

 the defcription of Northumberland, 

 310. 

 Montague Main colliery, (feams of 

 cual in) 312. 



N 



National advantages which the encou- 

 ragement of the growth of flax will 

 produce, 26 1. 



Northern and .Southern States of A- 

 merica, agricultural diflinflion be- 

 tween, 307. 



Northumberland, (Review of MefTrs 

 Bailey and Culley's general view of) 



Notes to correfpondents, 120, 239, 



489. 

 Number of people one acre of flax will 



cir.ploy, 262. 



O 



Oat?, (o!i the management of a late 

 crop of) 363. Angus oats, their 

 fertility, 423. 



Obituary, with biographical notices, 

 XI9, '234. 361, 489^ 



Obftacles to improvement enumerated 

 bylDr Robertfon—townOiips — run- 

 rig — uncertain boundaries — fcrvi. 

 tildes — thirlage — fhort leafes — dif- 

 tance from manure — com 111008,199, 

 In the county of Northumberland, 

 no leafes, or very flnort ones — 

 and tithes particularly in kind, 



43 3- 

 Over-fweat, how prevented in flack- 

 ing hay in the vicinity of Loudon, 



254. 



P 

 Paring the fiirf.ice (obfcrvations on) 

 in the Highlands, 407 — ccniured, 



Premiums ofTered by the board of A- 



gricuhure for 1800, 140. 

 Prefent ftate and management of 

 common fields and wafte lands in 

 Yorkfhire, 366 — ftate of ^he open 

 fields that are cultivated, ib. — wailo 

 lands, about 849,272 acres, partly 

 common to all, and partly reftridled, 

 ib. — promilcuous culture andpal^ur- 

 age, ib.— -rotation of crops ufed, ib. 

 — draining entirely negledcd, 369. 

 This diftribution of lands in com- 

 mon, feems to have come from feu- 

 dal times, ib. Saxon equable laws 



jjegleiSlcd, 



