VOLUMES OXE TO SIXTEEN. 



81 



manure on its substitution for guano, 



xiv. 374. 

 PusEY, P., on foreign nitrates, xv. 514. 

 ■ , notice of liis death by tlie Journal 



Committee, xvi. 268. 

 , experiment on the elementarj- 



principk'S of mamire as applied to the 



growth of wheat, xvi. 529. 

 , the resolution of the Council of the 



J^oyal Agr. Soc. of England on his 



death, and letter of Lorcl Portman to 



his family, xvi. 607 ; the reply of Mr. 



T. D. Acland, 608. 

 PuTLOWKS farm, xvi. 295. 

 Pym, F., on the use of burnt clay as a 



manure for heavy clay soils, iii. .'323. 

 Pykites, analysis of, xiii. 532. 



Q. 



QcAvrocK Hills, the farming of (Ac- 

 land), xi. 693. 



QuARTKR-EViL, the, in calves in Derby- 

 shire (Rowley), xiv. 53, 



in sheep (Seaman), xvi. 14. 



QoAUTi-EV, Francis, on his merits as a 

 breeder (Acland), xi. C80. 



QPAUTZ, analysis of, xiii. 582. 



Qdeen, the, the poultry-house belonging 

 to, at Windsor, xii. 132. 



E. 



Eackiieatii sub -turf plough, Sir E. 



Stracey on, ii. 37. 

 itADNoR or Welsh sheep, J. Wilson on, 



xvi. 232. 

 IiAGs as a manure for beetroot, by P. 



Pusey, vi. 529. 

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



617. 

 Pagwort, the common, its soils and 



habits (Huckman), xvi. 362. 



, the hoary, xvi. 362. 



Pailwavh, on the conveyance of mineral 



manures on, by J. Trimmer, xvi. 135. 

 Pain-water contains ammonia, Liebig, 



ii. 255. 

 , the depth which fell in each month 



and eacii year, 183C to 1843, in llert- 



fonlsliire, and the proportion of this 



which evaporated and filtered through 



the soil, V. 151 (Dickinson), i^cc 



" Drainage of land." 

 , its et!ect on crops, by J. B. Lawes, 



V. 23(t. 

 — — , on tlie connccti(m between the fall 



of, and the cultivation of the district, 



by N. Whitley, xi. 11; annual and 



VOLS. 1. — -Wi. 



monthly falls of, 12 ; effect of elevation 



upon, 15. 

 Pain-water, B. Simpson on, xi. 639, 



646, 

 , depth of the fall in England, 1829 



to 1847, xi. 660. 

 ■ , depth of, in Lincolnshire, by J. A. 



Clarke, xii. 297. 

 , the rainfalls of Cumberland, by 



W. Dickinson, xiii. 211. 

 ■ , the total absence of, at Iquique in 



Peru, xiii. 351. 

 , rainfall at Martin Mere in Lanca- 

 shire, xiv. 166. 



of East Lothian (Stevenson), xiv, 



279. 



contains ammonia, xiv. 379 ; ana- 

 lysis of specimens from Pusey and 

 Paris, ih. 



of Oxfordshire (Read), xv. 191. 



of Dorsetshire (Ruegg), xv. 435-6. 



, ammonia, proportions of, found in, 



by various chemists (Way), xvi. 267, 



, rainfall in Buckinghamshire 



(Read), xvi. 271. 



Rakes, horse, see " Horse-rakes." 



PAM-nREEDERS of Oxfordshire (Read), 

 XV. 230. 



Randell, Charles, on the improvement 

 of cold and heavy soils by the applica- 

 tion of burnt clay, v. 113. Sec " Clay, 

 burnt." 



Ranunculus acris,sfe "Upright meadow- 

 crowfoot." 



arvensis, see " Corn crowfoot." 



bulbosus, see " Bulbous crowfoot." 



ficaria, see "Pilewort crowfoot." 



repens, see "Creeping crowfoot." 



Rape grown extensively in Germany (S. 

 Carr), i. 124 ; dressed with 100 ll)s. of 

 gypsum per acre in the spring, /''. 



, growth of, in Cornwall (Karkeck), 



vi. 430. 



, analysis of, by J. T. Way and 0. 



Ogston, xi. 513. 



, on the et^'ect of climate on the 



growth of, by B. Simpson, xi. 657. 



, on the comparative merit of, and 



turnips (Lawes), xii. 401. 



, analysis of, xiii. 474. 



RAPE-tAKE, on, as food for stock, by P. 

 Pusey, X. 247, 496. 



, the analysis, by J. T. Way. x. 493, 



as food for slieep (P. Pusey), x. 



496. 



, on the advantages of using a pro- 

 portion as food for stock (sheep \ by 

 .1. H. Cbarnock, xi. 612. 



, on feeding cattle on, combined with 



roots, cooked and uncooked, by Colonel 

 Macdouall, xiii. 115. 



O 



