58 



INDEX TO ROYAL AGRICULTURAL JOURNAL. 



Lice of com crops, vi. 5G3. 



of peas and beans, vii. 416. 



Light, its action on the leaves of plants 

 (Fownes), iv. 513. 



, its influence on plants, by G. 



Phillips, vii. 308. 



, emitted by decomposing animal sub- 

 stances and by potatoes (Bowditch), 

 xiv. 340. 



Light laud farming (Haxton), xv. 88. See 

 " Soils," " Surrey," &c. 



Lime, on the use of, by J. Sybray, iii. 429. 



in Nottinghamshire (Corringham), 



vi. 35 ; the varying quality of the 

 Derbyshire and Yorkshire, ih. 



, its value as a first dressing for ne"wly 



reclaimed heath-lands, vi. 93. 



, as a manure in Devonshire (Tanner), 



ix. 468. 



• used as a manure in South Wales 



(Read), x. 143. 



, P. Pusey, on, xi. 408. 



, tried in irrigation in Cumberland 



(Dickinson), xiii. 293. 



, chemical properties of (Hemming), 



xiii. 429. 



, analysis of three soils in -which it 



■was present in the state of silicate, sul- 

 phate, and carbonate, xiii. 554. 



, analysis of a soil said to be over- 

 limed, xiii. 554. 



, its use as a manure in Derbyshire, 



(Rowley), xiv. 38. 



, useful on the soils of silica strata 



of the lower chalk (Way and Paine), 

 xiv. 236. 



, its use in Surrey as a manure (Ever- 

 shed), xiv. 415. 



, its use in Herefordshire (Rowland- 

 son), xiv. 437 ; effect of, in different 

 seasons, 439. 



, as a deodorizer of town sewage 



(Way), XV. 157 ; analysis of the preci- 

 pitate produced, 161. 



, magnesian, as a deodorizer of 



sewage (Way), xv. 163. 



■ , used as a manure in Oxfordshire 



(Read), xv. 245. 



, on the influence of, upon the ab- 

 sorptive properties of soils, by J. T. 

 Way, XV. 491 ; action of, as a manure, 

 492 ; amount of, applied to the soil, 

 its relative weight, 495 ; quantity of 

 ammonia in soils, 505 ; and after lim- 

 ing, ib,, 512. 



Limestones of Derbyshire and Yorkshire, 

 composition of (Corringham). vi. 35. 



of the N. R. of Yorkshire (Milburn), 



ix. 516. 



— — , carboniferous, of Gloucestershire 

 (Bravendar), xi. 122. 



LINCOLNSHIRE. 



Limestones, carboniferous, of Egremont 

 in Cumberland, contain coprolitic 

 nodules (Dickinson), xiii. 209. 



Limestone soils of Cumberland, by W. 

 Dickinson, xiii. 209. 



• , magnesian, marls from, of Suther- 



landshire, analysis of, xiii. .536. 



, carboniferous, the, of Derbyshire 



(Rowley), xiv. 50 ; analysis of a soil 

 of, 53. 



soils (Fownes), iv. 501. 



of Nottinghamshire (Corringham), 



vi. 23. 



of North Wales (Rowlandson), vii. 



578. 



(magnesian) of the W. R. of York- 

 shire (Charnock), ix. 289. 



rock, common, analysed, xiii. 534. 



, magnesian, analysed, xiii. 534. 



of Derbyshire (Rowley), xiv. 20 ; 



analysis of a soil of, 21. 



Lime-tree, the, its planting and manage- 

 ment described (Falkener), iii. 273. 



, analysis of its wood and bark, xiii. 



530. 



LiNARiA elatine, see " Toad flax, the 

 sharp-pointed." 



minor, see " Snapdragon, the small." 



spuria, see " Toad flax, the round- 

 leaved." 



vulgaris, see " Toad flax, the yellow." 



Lincoln meeting (1854), report on the 

 implements shown at, by A. Hammond, 

 XV. 363. 



, report on the live stock shown at, 



by C. Barnett, xv. 379. 



, award of prizes at, for live stock, 



XV. Ixvi ; for implements, Ixxxiii. 



Lincolnshire, map of (Pusey), iv. 302. 



, on the agricultural improvements of, 



by P. Pusey, iv. 287 ; its high state 

 of cultivation, ih. ; once a dreary 

 waste, still called Lincoln heath, ih. : 

 its ancient lighthouse, Dunston Pillar, 

 ib. ; north Lincoln heath, 288 ; the 

 north and south Lincoln heaths, ih. ; 

 the chalk wolds of Lincolnshire, ih. • 

 state of cultivation, ib. ; the farms of 

 Lord Yarborough, Mr. Uppleby, and 

 Mr. Graham, ih. ; the farming of Lin- 

 colnshire and that of East Lothian, 

 289 ; the objects of agricultural interest 

 which the covmty presents, ih. ; the two 

 ranges of hills, the heath and the wold, 

 ih.; the fen, 290; this formerly the 

 great morass, ib.; the fenmen, ib.; 

 Camden's account of them, ib. ; the 

 ground towards the sea, ib. ; Arthur 

 Young's report of these fens, 290, 291 ; 

 Rennie's mode of draining them, 291 ; 

 embanking in the neighbourhood of 



