76 



IXDEX TO ROY.IL AGRICULTURAL JOURNAL. 



PHOSPHOIUTE. 



Phosphoritk, Spanish, on the American 

 and other native phosphates of lime, 

 by J. Hudson, xii. 249 ; the apatite, 

 253 ; analysis of specimens from Nor- 

 •way, Spain, and the Tyrol, 254. 



Phosphorus of vegetables (Bowditch), 

 xvi. 338. 



Phosphuretted liydrogene, emission of, 

 by decomposing animal matter (Bow- 

 ditch), xvi. 340. 



Pickering, the vale of (Henderson), xiv. 

 133 ; on the Kirameridge cla)', ib. 



PiERSON, J., on burning land for manure, 

 viii. 77. 



Pigeons, on the rearing and management 

 of, by W. Trotter, xii. 196. 



• , the dung of, its analysis, xiii. 482. 



Pigs, how a cottager may profitably keep 

 one (Main), ii. 337. 



, a pig which lived IGO days without 



food, iv. 224 ; effect of manifestation 

 <jf force, 225 ; fattening animals kept 

 from moving, ib. ; experiment with 

 some pigs, ib. ; Mr. Morton's trials 

 with fattening pigs, 233 (Playfair). 



— — , the pigs kept in Cheshire (Palin), 

 V. 73. 



, the food of, fat and flesh-producing 



(Karkeek), v. 265. 



of Norfolk (Almack), v. 318. 



, the excrements of, examined by 

 Dr. C. Sprengel, i. 491. 



, those of Nottinghamshire (Corring- 



hani), vi. 21. 



, those of Devonshire (Tanner), ix. 



482. 



, those of the N. R. of Yorkshire 



(Milburn), ix, 515. 



of Lancashire (Garnett), x. 40. 



of South Wales (Read), x. 140. 



of Gloucestershire (Bravendar), xi. 



143. 



, on the breeding and management 



of, a prize essay, by T. Rowlandson, 

 xi. 574; the various breeds of, 575; 

 the Chinese, 577 ; Neapolitan, ib. ; the 

 JBerkshire, 578 ; on the choice of a 

 breed, 586 ; pork for market, ib. ; pig- 

 killing and cutting up, 588 ; lard, 591; 

 curing hams and bacon, 592 ; the 

 best mode of rearing, keeping, and fat- 

 tening, 598 ; going to boar, 599 ; exer- 

 cise necessary for growing pigs, ib. ; 

 the sties, GOO ; cleanliness of, ib. ; food 

 of, COl ; the improved Essex, 603 ; 

 feed regiilarly, 605. 



— — of Northamptonshire, by AY. Beam, 

 xiii. 85. 



of Cumberland, by W. Dickinson, 



xiii. 270. 



, the number of, exhibited at the So- 



ciety's meetings, from Oxford in 1839 

 to Lewes in 1852, xiii. 403. 



Pigs, analysis of solid excreta of, xiii. 

 482. 



, analysis of urine of, xiii. 506. 



of East Lothian (Stevenson), xiv. 



302. 



, on feeding, by J. B. Lawes, xiv. 



458. 



of Oxfordshire (Read), xv. 235. 



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



XV. 276 ; the fine taste and smell of the 

 pig, 283 ; not such filthy feeders as is 

 commonly supposed, 283 ; dentition of, 

 346. 



, those shown at the Lincoln meeting 



(1854), XV. 382; the frauds practised 

 by some exhibitors, ib. 



• , on the hereditary diseases of pigs 



and sheep, by Finlay Dun, xvi. 16 ; 

 peculiar breeds of, 18. 



occasionally fed on fish and frogs in 



Hungary (P. Love), xvi. 154. 



of Buckinghamshire (Read), xvi. 



301. 



Piggery, on the construction of, xi. 203 

 (Tancred) ; (Ewart), 259. 



Pigeons'-dung employed in Flanders as 

 a top-dressing for flax (Kham), ii. 312 ; 

 the value of that from 100 pigeons, ib. 



PiLEVvoRT, crowfoot, its soils and habits 

 (Buckman), xvi. 360. 



Pimpernel, or poor man's weatherglass 

 (Buckman), xvi. 364. 



PiNATE, analysis of, xiii. 532. 



Pipeclay analysed, xiii. 53G. 



Plane-tree, the, its planting and man- 

 agement (Falkener), iii. 271. 



Plantago lanceolata, see " Ribwort plan- 

 tain." 



media, see " Broad-leaved plantain." 



Plantain, the meal analysed, xiii. 522. 



■ , analysis of a soil where plantain 



would not grow, xiii. 554. 



Planting trees, on (Falkener), iii. 281. 



• , on the system of planting and the 



management of plantations at Welbeck, 

 by J. E. Deuison, ix. 366 ; the Green- 

 dale oak, 367 ; experiments made on 

 difl'erent systems, 368 ; only trees 

 planted, oak, Spanish chesnut, and 

 larch, 370. 



■ , on Scotch fir and larch, by Sir J. S. 



Menteath, ix. 373. 



in Somersetshire (Acland), xi. 738. 



in Cumberland (Dickinson), xiii. 



280. 



■ , effect of soil on the growth .of 



(Evershed), xiv. 416, 451. 



Plant-lice, or aphides, by J. Curtis, iii. 

 49, vi. 503, vii. 41C. 



