VOLUMES ONE TO SIXTEEN. 



41 



FUNGUSES. 



Funguses of the British farm, on, by the 

 Rev. Edwin Sidney, x. 382; mouldi- 

 ness, 38.3 ; mildew, 384 ; the Chlados- 

 porium herbarum, 3SG ; the uredines 

 of corn plants, ih. ; smut, bunt, or pep- 

 perband, 387 ; oecidium of the ber- 

 berry, 388 ; remedies for some of these 

 funguses, ib. • the Ustilago hypodytes, 

 390 ; theory of fairy-rings, 391 ; the 

 aspergilljOr-'mouldiness of stacked hay, 

 391-396; the fungi of peas, 391 ; the 

 botrytis of the vetch, 392 ; of the po- 

 tato, ih. • of turnips, mangold-wurtzel, 

 and carrots, 394 ; of hops, ih. ; of dry 

 •wood, the dry rot, ih. ; the mould on the 

 inside of casks and on bread, 396 ; in 

 milk, 397 ; the mould on sapy meat, 

 398 ; the funguses of animals, 399 ; 

 those of live animals not transferable 

 to dead, 398. 



, on certain, with reference to the 



potato disease, by F. J. Graham, xi.443, 



in grasses, by J. Buckman, xv. 474. 



FuRROw-PRESSER, skctch of ouc uscd in 

 Cheshire, v. 110. 



FuKZE (see " Gorse," " Gorse-bruisers''), 

 the, for fences, J. Grigor on, vi. 224. 



, an essay on, by O. O. Roberts, vi. 



379 ; fences of, 385 ; preparation of, as 

 food, 387 ; analysis of, 397. 



, its cultivation, and preparation as 



food for cattle (Elly), vi. 523. 



, analysis of, xiii. 474. 



, its presence on old pastures in 



Dorsetshire indicates profitable barley 

 and turnip land (Uuegg), xv. 424. 



, on the cultivation of, on the soils 



of the New Forest, by J. Trimmer, xvi. 

 138. 



, its soils and habits (Buckman), xvi. 



3C0. 



G. 



Gabell, C, on a new subsoil-plough, ii. 



241. 

 Galeopsis ladanum, sec " Hemp-nettle, 



the red." 

 villosa, see " Hemp-nettle, the 



downy." 

 tetrahit, sec "Hemp-nettle, the com- 

 mon." 

 vorsicolor, sec " Hemp-nettle, the 



large-flowered." 

 Galii'm aparine, see "Goose-grass." 



tricorue, see " C^orn bedstraw." 



Gam.oway cows, milk from, compared 



willi tliat from Kerry and Ayrshire 



cow.s, iv. 436. .S^cv " Cows." 

 Galton, Erasmus, a proposed method of 



taming a savage bull, iv. 5o9. 



Galton, Erasmus, an account of an im- 

 provement of a shaking bog at Jleare, in 

 Cheshire, vi. 182. 



Game, four-footed, on the evils of, by 

 P. Pusey, xi. 405 ; cost of, iv. 309. 



in Surrey, injury from rabbits 



(Evershed), xiv. 410 ; in Sufiblk (Rayn- 

 bird), viii. 320. 



Garget, or inflammation in the udder of 

 cows ("NY. Sibbald), xii. 562. 



in the ewe (W. Sibbald), xii. 578. 



Garlick, the crow (Buckman), xvi. 366. 



, the hog's (Buckman), xvi. 366. 



Garnett, W. J., on the farming of Lan- 

 cashire, a prize report, x. 1 . 



Garrett's horsehoe, described by P. 

 Pusey and T. L. Taylor, iv. 77. 



Gas-water as a manure for barley, J. 

 Paynter on, i. 45. 



Gas-works, the ammoniacal liquor of 

 the gas-works. Dr. Fowues on, iv. 541 ; 

 Dr. A. Voelcker on, xvi. 93. 



• , refuse of, as manures, by H. Hand- 

 ley, i. 45. 



, lime refuse, analysis of, xiii. 498. 



, tar as a manure, on, by Dr. A. 



Voelcker, xvi. 93. 



Gates, on those shown at the Lewes 

 meeting (in 1852), xiii. 328. 



Gault, that of Kent described by G. 

 Biickland, vi. 270. 



, that under the Lincolnshire fens 



(J. A. Clarke), viii. 92. 



, analyses by J. T. Way of the lower 



gault, xii. 546 ; of the middle, 547 ; 

 and of the upper gault, 548 ; of the 

 soft rock above the gault, 549 ; and of 

 the soft brown rock immediately above 

 the gault, 549. 



between Farnham and PetersSeld 



(Way and Paine), xiv. 231. 



of Oxfordshire (C. Read), xv. 195. 



of Buckinghamshire (C. Read), xvi. 



276. 



Geach, W. E., on the best mode of stor- 

 ing turnips, ii. 137. 



Geese, on the rearing and management of 

 (W. Trotter), xii. 193. 



GENibTA Auglica, see " Greenweed, nee- 

 dle." 



tinctoria, sea " Greenweed, dyer's." 



Geoi.ogv, the connection between, and 

 agriculture in Cornwall, Devon, and 

 West Somerset, by Sir H. T. De la 

 Beche, iii. 21 ; the amount of fertility 

 which may be estimated as due to the 

 decomposition of the subsoil rocks, 22 ; 

 the blue lias of Lyme llegis, the red 

 marl and sandstone of Sidmoiith, ih. y 

 beneficent efl'ects of shelter from the 

 sea-breezes at Mount Edgcumbe and 



