The Cereals in AmericaOrange Judd Company, 1908 - 421 páginas |
Dentro del libro
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Página 1
... land . The acre was limited to its present definite quantity by statutes of Edward I , Edward III , and Henry VIII . known as horticulture . In American agriculture , with the CLASSIFICATION AND CHOICE OF FIELD CROPS I Agriculture ...
... land . The acre was limited to its present definite quantity by statutes of Edward I , Edward III , and Henry VIII . known as horticulture . In American agriculture , with the CLASSIFICATION AND CHOICE OF FIELD CROPS I Agriculture ...
Página 2
... lands and large production of animals on these enclosed areas , on the one hand , and the extension of the growth of fruits and vegetables to large areas , on the other hand , these distinctions somewhat disappear . In general , hor ...
... lands and large production of animals on these enclosed areas , on the one hand , and the extension of the growth of fruits and vegetables to large areas , on the other hand , these distinctions somewhat disappear . In general , hor ...
Página 4
... land was given at 415 million acres . This probably means that 125 million acres were in pasture . The area devoted to hay and pasture was therefore substantially the same as that given to the cereals . About one acre in thirty of the ...
... land was given at 415 million acres . This probably means that 125 million acres were in pasture . The area devoted to hay and pasture was therefore substantially the same as that given to the cereals . About one acre in thirty of the ...
Página 6
... lands , twenty grasses for embankments , nineteen grasses for holding shifting sands . In a number of instances the same grass occurs in two or more different classes . The principal cultivated grasses for hay are timothy and red top ...
... lands , twenty grasses for embankments , nineteen grasses for holding shifting sands . In a number of instances the same grass occurs in two or more different classes . The principal cultivated grasses for hay are timothy and red top ...
Página 10
... . Plants , like animals , have great adaptability : they may become accli- mated and do fairly well when neither soil nor climate is like their native land . Many wild plants show great vitality ΙΟ THE CEREALS IN AMERICA.
... . Plants , like animals , have great adaptability : they may become accli- mated and do fairly well when neither soil nor climate is like their native land . Many wild plants show great vitality ΙΟ THE CEREALS IN AMERICA.
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Términos y frases comunes
aleurone average barley bran broom corn buckwheat bushels bushels per acre cent cereals chinch bug climate color corn crop crude fiber culm cultivated dent maize drill dry matter ears embryo endosperm Expt Farms Rpt feeding feet fertilizers field five flint flour flowering glume fodder four germination gluten grade grain grass grow grown growth harvested Hessian fly hull husk Illinois Illinois Station inches deep increase injury insects Kafir kernel land less maize maize plant manure maturity method nitrogen North oats obtained Ohio one-half Ontario Agricultural College outer glumes panicle percentage plat plowing pollen pounds produced protein rachis rainfall rice ripening roots rows season silage six-rowed smut soil sorghum sowing sown species spike spikelets stalks starch stover straw sweet maize threshing tion U. S. Dept usually variation varieties vary weeds weight per bushel winter wheat yellow yield of grain
Pasajes populares
Página 341 - No. 2 barley shall be sound, of healthy color, not plump enough for No. 1, reasonably clean and reasonably free from other grain. No. 3 barley shall Include slightly shrunken and otherwise slightly damaged barley not good enough for No. 2. No.
Página 341 - No. 3 barley shall Include slightly shrunken and otherwise slightly damaged barley not good enough for No. 2. No. 4 barley shall include all barley fit for malting purposes not good enough for No. 3. No. 5...
Página 273 - No 1 white corn shall be sound, dry, plump and well cleaned. No. 2 WHITE CORN— No.