J 50 GENERAL INDEX TO EOYAL AGRICULTURAL JOURNAL. 



.PY3I. 



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



manure for heavy clay soils, iii. 323. 

 Pybites, analysis of, xiii, 532. 



Q- 



QuANTOCK Hills, the farming of (Acland), 



xi. 693. 

 QrAnTER-E\ii., the, in calves in Derby- 

 shire (Rowley), xiv. 53. 



in sheep (Seaman), xvl. 14. 



QuAUTLY, Francis, on his merits as a 



breetler (Acland), xi. G80. 

 QrARTZ, analysis of, xiii. 582. 

 Queen. tl>e, tlie poultry-house belonging 



to, at Windsor, xii. 132. 

 QrETELET on temperature of soil, xvii. 



417. 

 QiEKETT, Prof., on the size of blood 



cells, xxi. 213. 

 QuELLEU plant, see Salicornea herbacea, 



xxi. 209. 

 Quevenne's lacto-densimeter and crcam- 



ometer described, xxiv. 310. 



R. 



Eackheatii Bub-turf plough, Sir E. 

 Stracey on, ii. 37. 



Eadxor or Welsh sheep, J. Wilson on, 

 svi. 232. 



, Li)rd, his cottages for labourers at 



Coieshill Spearing), xxi. 30. 



Eags as a manure ibr beetroot, by P. 

 Puscy, vi. 529. 



. the analysis oF, Ly J. T. Way, x. 



617. 



Eagwort, the common, its soils and habits 

 (Buekman), xvi. 3G2. 



, the lionrj-, xvi. 302. 



Eaii.wat-cvttixgs, the slopes of con- 

 solidated by couch-grass (Buckman), 

 xvii. 1g4. 



Eailway horse-power (American), xx. 

 117. 



Railways, on the conveyance of mineral 

 mantnes on, by J. Trunmir, xvi. 135. 



for steam cultivation (Halketl), 199 ; 



cost per acre, 10/., laid in timber, 

 200. 



Eainals, Hany (Brit. Vice-Consul), a 

 report upon the past and present ttate 

 of the agriculture of the Danish mo- 

 narchy, published with the sanction of 

 the Foreigii-oilice, xxi. 207. 



EiUNFALL, in Paris and Alsace, xvii. 445. 



in Various districts of England and 



Scotland (J. T. Way), xvii. 125; its 

 assumed average, 25 in., ih. ; its annual 



kain-water. 



equivalent per acre, ib. ; effects of 

 evaporation as tested by the Dalton 

 rain-gauge, 126 ; yearly and monthly 

 tables of rainfall, evaporation and filtra- 

 tion (Parkes), 127 ; proportion of rain- 

 fall entering drains, 129. 



Eainkall for 1855 and 1856, analysis of 

 (J. T. Way), xvii. 619. 



for 1858-00, at Alilershot (J. Arnold), 



xxii. 340; at Ealing, from 1848-60 

 (W. C. Spooner), 342 ; at Go.sport from 

 1816 to 1858 (Dr. Burncy), 343. 



Eain-gauge, the Dalton gauge, xvii. 126 ; 

 tiiat used by Mr. Lawe.s, 146. 



RArN-WATER contains ammonia, Liebig, ii. 

 255. 



, the Depth which fi-ll in each month 



and each year, 1836 to 1813, in Hert- 

 fordshire, and the proportion of this 

 which evaporated and iiltered through 

 the soil, v. 151 (Dickinson). Seo 

 " Drainage of land." 



, its ellect on crops, by J. B. Lawe.s, 



v. 230. 



, on the connexion between tlie fall 



of, and the cultivation of the district, 

 by N. Whitley, xi. 11; anunal and 

 monthly falls of, 12 ; effect of elevation 

 upon, 15. 



, B. Slmp.son on, xi. 639, 646. 



, depth of tlie fall in England, 1829 



to 1817, xi. 6i;0. 



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



Chiike, xii. 297. 



• , the rainfalls of Cumberland, by 



W. Dickinson, xiii. 211. 



, ti.e tutal absence of, at Iquiquo in 



Peru, xiii. 351. 



, rainfall at Martin Mere in Lanca- 

 shire, xiv. 106. 



of East Lothian (Stevenson), xiv. 



279. 



contains ammonia, xiv. 379; ana- 

 lysis of specimens from Puscy and 

 Paris, ib. 



of Oxfordshire (Eeid), xv. 191. 



of Dorsefsliire (Eucgg), xv. 435-6. 



, amniouia, proportions of, found in, 



by various ehenii.sts (Way , xvi. 207. 



, rainfall in Buckinghamshire (Eead), 



xvi. 271. 



, newly fallen rich in oxygen, xvii. 



439 ; its action on iron (Guibourt), ib. 



, salts in, xvii. 441. 



, nitrogen in, xvii. 445. 



, experiments on, by Lawes and Gil- 

 bert, BarraU, and Buussingault, xvii. 

 142. 



, amoimt of nitric acid and ammonia 



in Eothamstcd rain-water , J. T. Way), 

 xvii. 143: ditto, per acre, 144; total 



