64 



INDEX TO EOYAL AGEICULTURAL JOURNAL. 



MAPofpart of North-East America (John- 

 ston), xiii. 8, xiv. 1. 



■ of Northamptonshire (Beam), xiii. 



44, 



of Cumberland (Dickinson), xiii. 



247. 



■ of Derbyshire (Eowley), xiv. 18. 



of Surrey (Evershed), xiv. 396. 



of Herefordshire (Rowlandson\ xiv. 



433. 



■ ■ of the river Nene (Clarke), xv. 43. 



of Oxfordshire (Read), xv. 189. 



of Dorsetshire (Ruegg), xv. 390. 



■ of Buckinghamshire (Read), xvi. 



269. 

 Mare, on the detection of pregnancy in, 



by W. Youatt, i. 170. 

 Marl burnt into ashes, by F. Pym, iii. 



325. 

 , analysis of the fossiliferous green, 



by J. T. Way, xii. 550 ; of the grey 



marl or malm, 651. 

 , peat analysed, xiii. 536 ; clay, ih. ; 



chalk, ih. ; upper greensand, ih. ; lower 



greensand, ih. ; magnesian, ib. ; powdery, 



ih. 

 , red, soils, rotation on in Derbyshire 



(Rowley), xiv. 60. 

 , the agricultural importance of those 



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



1 25 ; the " shell marl " and the " cherry 



marl," 134. 

 Marling, the experience of Mr. W. Lin- 

 ton, at Sherriff Hinton near York, ii. 67. 



See " Soils." 

 ■ at F. Pym's at the Hazels in Bed- 

 fordshire, described by P. Pusey, iii. 



216. 

 ■ , advantages found by a repetition of, 



in Germany (Burness), iii. 233. 

 — ■ — of a light sandy soil on the Duke 



of Bedford's farm at Woburn, iii. 233 ; 



a second time, 234 ; the clay employed, 



234. 



or claying land, by F. Overman 



iii. 235 ; used upon gravelly and sandy 

 soils, and on the moorland, ih. ; labour, 

 time of marling, 235; marling corrects 

 acidity and gives solidity, 236. 



. in Norfolk (Almack), v. 309. 



in Mecklenburgh (S. Carr), i. 126. 



, the analysis of a marl which, having 



beeu used as a manure, rendered the 

 subsequent application of bones inope- 

 rative, by Dr. Lyon Playfair, vi. 575. 



• in Suffolk, the soils to which it is 



applicable (Raynbird), viii. 312. 



in South Wales (Read), x. 143. 



, P. Pusey on, xi. 407. 



Marshall, J., a report on the feeding of 

 stock with prepared food, and a descrip- 



tion of tlie apparatus employed, a prize 

 essay, vii. 391. 



Marsh bent-grass, or squitch florin, its 

 growth in difl'erent situations (Buck- 

 man), XV. 468 ; its soils and habits 

 (Buckman), xvi. 366. 



Marshland, J. Mutton on the improve- 

 ment of, iv. 580. 



of Essex (Plaistow) lets for 4?. to 5^. 



per acre, v. 33. 



Marshmallow, the common, its soils and 

 habits (Buckman), xvi. 360. 



, the round-leaved, xvi. 360. 



Marshwood, vale of (Ruegg), xv. 420. 



Martin Mere, in Lancashire, on the 

 drainage of a portion of it, by H. White, 

 xiv. 156. 



Massachusets, the otter-shaped sheep of 

 (Dun), xvi. 17. 



Mastication, the force employed in, re- 

 duced by chaff-cutting (Playfair), iv. 

 234. 



Matricaria chamomilla, see " Chamo- 

 mile, wild." 



Mawskins, a recipe for curing the 

 (Paliu), vi. 123. 



Maxims of the Dutch farmers, see " Agri- 

 culture of Netherlands." 



in feeding live stock, see " Food of 



live stock." 



, " the last food pays best," iv. 264. 



, the error of Arthur Young, when 



he said of Lincoln heath, " very little 

 remains to do," iv. 302. 



, " every blackcock killed by its 



owner on Exmoor costs more than a 

 full-fed ox," iv. 309. 



, the Spanish saying, " wherever the 



foot of the sheep touches the land is 

 turned into gold," vi. 5. 



, " grass should be 1 2 hours old for 



a sheep and 12 days for a bullock," 

 xii. 387. 



in Cumberland, " more depends on 



the rearing of stock than the kinds of 

 stock," xiii. 253; " the laziest shepherd 

 has always the best dog," 270 ; the old 

 and bad farmer's axiom, " switch is the 

 mother of grass," 273. 



on the Derbyshire heavy soils, 



" plough deep to find the gold," xiv. 28. 



, a Surrey maxim, " all stock from its 



birth to its death should be constantly 

 fattening as well as growing," xiv. 84. 



■ , an old exploded Surrey, " barley 



after mowing nmst be exposed to nine 

 dews," xiv. 87. 



■ , "the worse bred the female, _ the 



more likely is the offspring to resemble 

 a well-bred sire," Lord Spencer, xiv. 

 223. 



