44: 



INDEX TO EOYAL AGRICULTUIl.lL JOURNAL. 



Gluten, on the determination of, in grain, 

 iv. .5r)4. 



, chemical properties of (Hem- 

 ming), xiii. 426. 



Glyceria aquatica (poa), see " Reed 

 meadow-grass." 



GnaphaliUjM dioicum, see " Cudweed, 

 the mountain." 



■ religinosum, sec " Cudweed, the 



marsh." 



Gneiss rocks, analysis of, xiii. 534. 



GoDDARD, Henry, on the construction of 

 a pair of cottages for agricultural 

 labourers, a first-prize essay, x. 230. 



Goggles in sheep (H. Cleeve), i. 296. 



Golden valley, the, of Herefordshire (T. 

 Rowlandson), xiv. 434. 



Gold of pleasure, oil-cake, analysis of, 

 xiii. 522. 



■ , its soils and habits (Buckman),xvi. 



360. 



Goose grass, its soils and habits (Buck- 

 man), xvi. 362. 



GoRSE, as food for cattle, its cultiva- 

 tion and preparation, by S. EUy, vi. 

 523. 



GoRSE-BRUiSERS, a Tcport, by P. Pusey, 

 on those shown at the Gi"eat Exhibition 

 (in 1851), xii. 035. 



, on those shown at the Lewes meet- 

 ing in 1852, xiii. 327. 



Gossip's, Mr., improvements in Hatfield 

 Chace described, iv. 296, 



Gouda cheese (Rham), iii. 261. 



Gout-weed, its soils and habits (Buck- 

 man), xvi. 362. 



GowEN, R., account of the effects (good) 

 of a bituminous shale at Christian 

 Malford, Wilts, iv. 277. See " Shale." 



Graburn, R. S., on the advantage of 

 drilling maiden earth for turnips, vi. 

 488. 



Grafting turf, B. Baker on, v. 600. 



Graham, F. J., on the potato disease, a 

 prize essay, vii. 357. 



, on the injuries received by certain 



plants from the attacks of parasitic 

 fungi, with particular reference to the 

 potato disease, xi. 443. 



Graham, Sir James, on the Deanston 

 frequent drain system, as compared 

 with the furrow -draining and deep 

 ploughing of the midland counties of 

 England, i. 29. 



, results of experiments in subsoil- 

 ploughing and potato-planting, i. 244. 



Grains, brewer's, see " Brewers." 



Granaries, corn never keeps well in, 

 where cattle are confined below them 

 (J, Gray), iv. 5. 



■ , insects which affect corn in, by J. 



Curtis, iv. 78 ; the weevil, 98. 



Granaries, consti'uction of (Tancred), 

 xi. 197 ; (Ewart), 232. 



Granitic or growan soils of Cornwall, 

 iii. 31. -S'cc? " Geology." 



, described by W. F. Karkeek, vi. 



404. 



their influence upon the temperature 



of the atmospliere (^Whitley), xi. 10. 



rocks, analysis of, xiii. 534. 



, the farming of the light soils of the 



granite in Scotland (J. Haxton), xv. 92. 



Grant, J., a few remarks on the large 

 hedges and small enclosures of Devon- 

 shire and the adjoining counties, v. 

 420, vi. 240. 



Grasses, mowing by taskwork, the prices, 

 by H. Raynbird, vii. 124. 



, the growth of grass-seeds in Suffolk, 



by H. Raynbird, viii. 297. 



, the grass-seeds of the N. R. ot 



Yorkshire (M. Milburn) ix. 507. 



, the funguses which attack the, by 



the Rev. E. Sidney, x. 389- 



, the analysis of, by J. T. Way and 



G. H. Ogston, xi. 530 ; of the clovers, 

 536 ; of water-meadow grasses, 539. 



, the effect of climate on the growth 



of, by B. Simpson, xi. 649. 



■ of Cumberland (Dickinson), xiii. 



271-273. 



, analyses of meadow (Hemming), 



xiii. 466. 



, on the relative nutritive and fatten- 

 ing properties of different natural and 

 artificial grasses, by J, T. Way, xiv. 

 171 ; G. Sinclair's system of examina- 

 tion, 173 ; natural grasses, 176, 177, 

 180; artificial grasses, 177, 179, 180; 

 their albuminous or flesh-forming prin- 

 ciples, fatty matters, and heat-pro- 

 ducing principles, ib. 



, from a water-meadow, 1st and 2nd 



crop, analysis of (Way), xiv. 177. 



, growth of, in East Lothian (C." 



Stevenson), xiv. 285. 



, the natural history and agricultural 



economy of the British grasses, a prize 

 essay, by J. Buckman, xv. 462 ; the 

 jungle or bush grasses, 464 ; aquatic or 

 water grasses, 465 ; marine or sea-side 

 grasses, ib. ; meadow grasses, 466 ; 

 effects of irrigation upon, 467-469 : 

 agrarian grasses, 470 ; the diseases of 

 grasses, 474 ; the smut, ib. ; fungi, (6. ; 

 fairy-rings, 474-476 ; ergot of rye, 477, 



Grass-land, on grafting turf, B. Baker 

 on, V. 600. 



, on the advantages and disadvan- 

 tages of breaking up, a prize essay, by 

 J. Bravendar, vii. 161 ; down land, 

 163 ; cold pastures, 167 ; grazing 

 ground, 176 ; practice of breaking up. 



