14 



I^'DEX TO EOYAL AGKICULTURAL JOURNAL. 



monia in, by J. 13. Simonds, xlii. 373 ; 

 xiv. 244. 

 Cattle of different breeds shown at the 

 Society's meetings, from that at Ox- 

 ford in 1839, to that at Lewes in 1852, 

 xiii. 397. 



of Derbyshire (J. Rowley), xiv. 24; 



annual sale of, at Chatsworth, 44 ; ill 

 efi'ects of high breeding, 45. 



, on the food of cows (L. Ruegg), xiv. 



71 ; in Guernsey, ih. 



of East Lothian (C. Stevenson), xiv. 



296 ; the expense of conveying of, 297. 



, on the hereditary diseases of, by F. 



Dun, XV. 7G. 



of Oxfordshire (C. Read), xv. 222. 



• , on the teeth of, by J. B. Simonds, 



XV. 312. 



, those shown at the Lincoln meet- 

 ing (1854), XV. 380. 



— — , feeding of, in Dorsetshire (Ruegg), 

 XV. 418. 



;-, on feeding, on turnips raised with 



diliereut manures, by A. Templeton, 

 xvi. 1G3. 



• of Buckinghamshire (C. Read), xvi. 



293 ; Herefords, 293 ; shorthorns, 297 ; 

 cows, 298. 



Celandine, analysis of, xiii. 528 ; (Buck- 

 man), xvi. 370. 



Centaurea cyanus, see " Corn blue- 

 bottle." 



nigra, see " Knapweed, or black- 

 head." 



• scabiosa, see " Knapweed, the great, 



or hard-head." 



Cerastium arvense, see " Corn mouse- 

 ear." 



Cesspools in drains, J. Parkes on, vii. 

 270. 



Chadwick, E., on the sanitary effects of 

 land-drainage, iv. 151. 



Chaff given to animals to reduce the 

 amount of force requisite in mastica- 

 tion ( Playfair) , iv. 234. 



of oats, analysis of ash of (Way), 



vii. 647. 



' , clover, experiments with feeding 



sheep on, with oil-cake and swedes, by 

 J. B. Lawes, xvi. 47. 



Chaff-cutters, the, exhibited at the 

 Shrewsbury meeting, vi, 316. 



at the York meeting, trials of, ix. 



417. 



■ , a report of those shown at the Great 



Exhibition (in 1851), by P. Pusey, xii. 

 633. 



, a report on those shown (in 1852) 

 at the Lewes meeting, xiii. 325 ; horse 

 and steam chaif-cutters, 326. 



, a report on those shown at Glouces- 

 ter (1853), xiv. 360. 



Chaff-cutters, a report on those shown 

 at Lincoln (1854), XV. 371. 



at Carlisle (1855), xvi. 516. 



Ciiai-k formation, farming on, in Lin- 

 colnshire, the three points of (Pusey), 

 iv. 300. 

 Chalk, farming of, in Kent, by G. Buck- 

 laud, vi. 252. 



, on adding chalk to chalk soils 



(Pusey), iii. 183. 



, on the phosphoric strata in, by J. 



M. Paine and .1. T. Way, ix. 56. 



, the soils resting on, their deficiency 



in calcareous matters (Legard), ix. 87. 



, its use as a manure, by P. Pusey, 



xi. 410. 

 , the varying forms of, by J. Trim- 

 mer, xii. 451 ; the chalks of Nor- 

 folk, Cambridgeshii-e, &c., 480 ; of 

 Hertfordshire, by A. Young, 481 ; of 

 Berkshire, by Mavor, 482; of Wilt- 

 shire, by Davis, 483 ; of Hampsliire, 

 by Vancouver, 484 ; of Dorsetshire, by 

 Stevenson, 486 ; of Sussex, by A. 

 Young, 4 87; of Surrey, by Stevenson, 

 486, 488 ; of Kent, by Boys, 487 ; of 

 the whole chalk-range, by J. Trimmer, 

 489. 



. on the chemical and agricultural 



characters of the, by J. T. Way and 

 I J. M. Paine, xii. 544 ; the lower gault, 

 analysis of, 546 ; of the middle gault, 

 547 ; of the upper gault, 548 ; of the 

 soft rock above the gault, 549 ; of the 

 firestone rock, ib. ; of the soft brown 

 rock immediately above the gault, 549; 

 of the fossiiiferous green marl, 550 ; of 

 the grey marl or malm, 55i ; of the 

 lower clialk, 552 ; of the lower chalk 

 with flints, 553 ; of the upper soft 

 white or free chalk, ih. 554. 

 — and chalk-marl, analysis of, xiii. 

 536. 



marl from Farnham analysed, xiii.- 



536. 

 from Muedon and Maestricht, ana- 

 lysis of, xiii. 536. 

 of Surrey, cropping of, by S. Ever- 

 shed, xiv. 79. 



, on the silica strata of the lower 



chalk, by J. T. Way and J. M. Paine, 

 xiv. 225 ; soluble silica of, 226, 227 ; 

 malm, 230 ; the firestone rock, 229 ; 

 the gault between Farnham and Peters- 

 field, 231 ; specimens from Sel borne in 

 Hampshire, 235 ; the UnderclifFin the 

 Isle of Wight, 235 ; lime useful on 

 these soils, 236 ; bones useless, ib. ; on 

 making silicates of potash and soda, 

 238 ; silicate of lime, 239 ; probable 

 agricultural uses of, 241; effect of 

 upon wheat, 242. 



