46 Proofs of the Natural Rotation of Shrubs ^c. 



bility will be continued until the same thing happens 

 with regard to it as to the indigo, unless the want of 

 demand for the wool should cause it to be laid aside, 

 before the expected event shall have taken place. It is 

 also found, that land will yield excellent crops of cot- 

 ton, which will not produce indian corn, and I have on 

 the contrary, seen luxuriant crops of the latter growing 

 in St. Simons, Georgia, on land which I was told had 

 ceased to produce cotton. On tide lands too, it is found 

 greatly to benefit ground, which exhibits signs of dimi- 

 nished vigour, from long cultivation in cotton, to plant 

 rice, but in this case, the deposition from the water, 

 when the ground is overfiowed, may be supposed to 

 produce the efiect of a renewal of the soil. 



J. Mease. 



