84 



IXDEX TO EOYAL AGPJCULTUEAL JOIJENAL. 



sickle and scythe in harvesting wheats, 



i. 447. 

 Eo"DAVELL, J., on the improvements in 



Suffolk farmiug since Arthur Young's 



time, viii. 307. 

 EoLLERS, report on those shown at the 



Great Exhibition (in 1851), by P. 



Pusey, xii. .59-3. 

 • , those shown at the Carlisle meeting 



(18.55), xvi. 507. 

 EoMAN embankments in Lincolnshire 



(Clarke), xii. 279. 

 EoMXEY marsh, its cultivation, by G. 



Buckland, vi. 299. 

 sheep, described by J. Wilson, xvi. 



227. 

 EooFS, on hollow-brick, by E. Dunn, xv. 



181. 

 EooKS great destroyers of the wireworm 



(Curtis), V. 207. 

 • , a method of preserving corn-stacks 



from damage by rooks, by the Eev. T. 



Burroughes, xiv. C7. 

 EooT crops, sec " Turnips," &c. 



of Devonshire (Tanner), ix. 462. 



. , effect of climate on the growth of 



(Whitley), xi. 42. 

 of Northamptonshire (Beam), xiii. 



62. 

 , soils adapted for (Coleman), xvi. 



204. 

 EooTS of plants and trees, stoppage of 



drains by (Denison), i. 365. 

 of an ash-tree, an instance of, 95 



feet in length (Cambridge), vi. 342. 

 EooT-DiTCHiNG, in Essex (severing the 



roots of trees which extend into the 



fields) (Baker), v. 16. 

 EoT, the, in sheep (E. Smith), viii. 23. 

 , explained, its origin (L. Playfair), 



iv. 2.t5. 

 , E. Bakewell produced it in his 



sheep in order to forward their fatten- 

 ing, iv. 262. 

 • , on the liver-fluke in sheep, by J. B. 



Simonds, xv. 277. 

 EoTATioN of crops, on the turnip soils 



of Northumberland (Grey), ii. 161. 

 , on heavy lands, by W. Stace, prize 



essay, iv. 169. 

 , table of the inorganic matters drawn 



from the soil by one course of crops on 



the four-course system, by Professor 



Johnston, iv. 1 78. 

 , statement of the various systems of 



cropping in the South of Scotland on 



different varieties of land, by T. 



Balmer, iv. 194; on rich loam, ib. ; 



dry turnip-land, ib. ; light sandy soil, 



195 ; rich clay, ib. ; hard clay soil, ib. 

 , statement of a new and successful 



rotation of crops for heavy clays, by 

 .T. S. Nowlson of Northam, Hereford- 

 shire, iv. 409 ; on a farm of 200 acres, 

 rotation on arable land, 410. 

 EoTATioN of crops in Cheshire (Palin), 

 V. ; on sand-land dairy farms, 60 ; on 

 clay-land dairy farm, 62 ; on sand-land 

 arable farm, 63; on clay-land arable 

 farm, 64. See " Cheshire." 



in Wiltshire (Little), v. 162; on 



flinty and chalky loams, >b. ; on light 

 flinty soils, 163; on sandy loams, 165. 



, J. Towers on, i. 283 ; note by the 



Eev. W. L. Eham, 292. 



at Stinchcombe in Gloucestershire 



(Morton), i. 388. 



in Nottinghamshire (Corringham), 



vi. 7,' 23, 25. 



on the chalk of Kent (Buckland), 



vi. 254. 



in the Isle of Sheppy, vi. 257. 



in the Isle of Thane't, vi. 259. 



on the Cornish granite (Karkeek), 



vi. 404. 



on the Cornish grauwacke, vi. 413. 



on the light sands of Cambridge- 

 shire (Jonas), vii. 40 ; on its heavy- 

 soils, 52 ; absence of, on its fenlands, 

 70. 



in the Linconshire fens (Clarke), 



viii. 119. 

 . ■ in Sussex, by J. Famcombe (in the 



Southdowns), xi. 75 ; (in the eastern 



district), 80 ; (in the Weald of Sussex), 



81. 



in Gloucestershire (Bravendar), in 



the Isis valley, 130 ; in " the Vale," 145. 



in Lincolnshire, by J. A. Clarke, 



xii. 364 ; on the warp-lands, 366 ; on 

 the clay loam, 367 ; on the sand loam, 

 368. 



^— in Northamptonshire, by W. Beam, 



on its stony and sandy soils, xiii. 52 ; 



on its heavy soils, 61 ; on its moory 



and peaty soils, 70. 

 , ingredients abstracted from the soil 



and the atmosphere by a rotation of 



turnips, barley, clover, and wheat, xiii. 



560 ; and restored to the soil in manure, 



ib. 

 , the same, by a rotation of turnips, 



wheat, beans, wheat, mangolds, wheat, 



clover, and wheat, xiii. 562. 



in Derbyshire, by J. J. Eowley, 



xiv. ; on the soils of the magnesian 

 limestone, 20 ; on the gritstone of the 

 coal series, 28 ; on the millstone grit 

 and shale, 39 ; on the carboniferous 

 limestone, 50 ; in the Dove valley, 59. 



, on the improved methods of crop- 

 ping and cultivating light land, by 



