VOLUMES ONE TO TWEXTY-FIVE. 



79 



Gold of pleasure, its soils and habits 

 (liuckmaii), xvi. oGO. 



Golden vallej', the, of Hereforclshii'c (T. 

 Kowlandsou), xiv. 4:34. 



GooDLET, ou the use of cottou netting for 



. sheep fencing, xxiv. 546. 



Goose grass, its soils and habits (Buck- 

 man), xvi. 362. 



Gordon, Dr., on the fertilisation ot 

 segilops, xix. 104. 



GoRSE, as food for cattle, its cultivation 

 and jjreijaration, by S. EUy, vi. 523. 



GoRSE-BRUiSEES, a rcport, by P. Puscy, ou 

 those shown at the Great Exhibition 

 (in 1851), xii. 635. 



, on those shown at Lewes meeting 



(1852), xiii. 327. 



Gossip's, Mr., improvements in Hatfield 

 Chace described, iv. 296. 



GoimA cheese (Kham), iii. 261. 



GoiT-WEED, its soils and habits (Buck- 

 man), xvi. 362; 



GowEN, R., account of the good effects 

 of a bituminous sliale at Christian Mal- 

 ford, Wilts, iv. 277. See " Shale." 



Gkabuen, R. S., on the advantage of 

 drilling maiden earth for turnips, vi. 

 488. 



Grafting turf, B. Baker on, v. 600. 



Graham, F. J., on the potato disease, a 

 prize essay, vii. 357. 



, on the injuries received by certain 



plants from the attacks of parasitic 

 fungi, with particular reference to the 

 potato disease, xi. 443. 



, Sir James, on the Deanston 



frequent drain system, as compared 

 with the furrow-draining and deeji 

 liloughing of the midland counties of 

 England, i. 29. 



-T , results of exi^eriments in subsoil- 

 ploughing and potato-planting, i. 244. 



Grains, brewer's, see " Brewers." 



Gkanakies, corn never keeps well in, 

 where cattle are confined below them 

 (J. Gray), iv. 5. 



, insects which affect corn in, by J. 



Curtis, iv. 78 ; the weevil, 98. 



■^ , construction of (Tancred), xi. 197 ; 



(Ewart), 232. 



Granite, its composition, xvii. 463. 



of Corsica crumbles (Liebig), xvii. 



460 ; owing to decomposition of the 

 felspar, 461. 



Granitic or growan soils of Cornwall, iii. 

 • 31. See " Geology." 



-r-T— , desciibed by W. F. Karkeek, vi. 

 404. 



• ■ their influence upon the tempera- 

 ture of the atmosphere (Whitley;, xi. 

 10. 



Granitic rocks, analysis of, xiii. 534. 



, the farming of the light soils of the 



granite in Scotland (J. Haxtou), xv. 

 92. 



Grant, J., remarks on the large hedges 

 and small enclosures of Devonshire, 



•* &c., V. 420, vi. 246. 



Grantham, R. B., on the works for re- 

 claiming and marling the forest of 

 Delamcrc, xxv. 369. 



Grasses, mowing by taskwork, the prices, 

 by H. Raynbird, vii. 124. 



, the growth of grass-seeds in Suffolk, 



by H. Raynbird, viii. 297. 



, the grass-seeds of the N. R. of 



Yorkshire (M. Milburn), ix. 507. 



, the fungi wldch attack the, by the 



Rev. E. Sidney, x. 389. 



— — , the analysis of, liy J. T. Way and 

 G. II. Ogston, xi. 530 ; of the clovers, 

 536 ; of water-meadow grasses, 539. 



■ , the effect of climate ou the growth 



of, by B. Simpson, xi. 649. 



(if Cumberland (Dickinson), xiii, 



271-273. 



, analyses of meadow (Hemming), 



xiu. 466. 



, on the relative nutritive and fatten- 

 ing properties of different natural and 

 artificial grasses, by J. T. Way, xiv. 

 171 ; G. Sinclair's system of examina- 

 tion, 173 ; natural grasses, 176, 177, 

 180; artificial grasses, 177, 179, 180; 

 their albuminous or flesh-forming i)rin- 

 ciples, fatty matters, and heat-producing 

 principles, ib. 



, from a water-meadow, 1st and 2nd 



crop, analysis of (Way), xiv. 177. 



• , growth of, in East Lothian (C. 



Stevenson), xiv. 285. 



, the natural history and agricultural 



economy of the British grasses, a prize 

 essay, by J. Buckmau, xv. 462 ; the 

 jungle or bush grasses, 464 ; aquatic or 

 water grasses, 465 ; marine or sea-side 

 grasses, ih. ; meadow grasses, 466 ; 

 effects of irrigation upon, 467-469 ; 

 agrarian grasses, 470 ; the diseases of 

 grasses, 474 ; the smut, ih. ; fungi, ih. ; 

 fairy-rings, 474-476 ; ergot of rye, 477. 



, the natural history of British 



meadow and pasture grasses (Buck- 

 man), xvii. 162, 513. 



, modified by soil and cHmate (Buck-- 



man), xvii. 532-7 ; how distinguished- 

 from sedges, 165. 



, their structure (Buckman), xvii.- 



163 ; roots, ib. ; rhizomes or under- 

 ground stems, 164; culm or stem, ib.; 

 leaves and their constituent parts, 165 ; 

 the flower, 166 ; viviparous specimens, 



