Draining for Profit, and Draining for HealthJudd, 1911 - 252 páginas |
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Página 8
... close union is broken by the shrinking of its parts . Puddled clay remains practically impervious as long as it is saturated with water , and it does not entirely lose this quality until it has been pulverized in a dry state . A small ...
... close union is broken by the shrinking of its parts . Puddled clay remains practically impervious as long as it is saturated with water , and it does not entirely lose this quality until it has been pulverized in a dry state . A small ...
Página 12
... close to 66 one another as to prevent there being passages between ' them , owing to which circumstance soil in the mass is " always more or less porous . If , however , we proceed to " examine one of the smallest particles of which ...
... close to 66 one another as to prevent there being passages between ' them , owing to which circumstance soil in the mass is " always more or less porous . If , however , we proceed to " examine one of the smallest particles of which ...
Página 94
... close " contiguity with important drains , and , though I have 66 never convicted one , I cannot doubt that they are dan gerous . Oak , and black and white thorns , I have not “ detected , nor do I suspect them . The guilty trees have ...
... close " contiguity with important drains , and , though I have 66 never convicted one , I cannot doubt that they are dan gerous . Oak , and black and white thorns , I have not “ detected , nor do I suspect them . The guilty trees have ...
Página 103
... close at the sides of the marked stakes , and driven nearly their full length into the ground . The tops of these stakes furnish fixed points of elevation from which to take the measurements , and to make the compu tations necessary to ...
... close at the sides of the marked stakes , and driven nearly their full length into the ground . The tops of these stakes furnish fixed points of elevation from which to take the measurements , and to make the compu tations necessary to ...
Página 119
... close to each other and be firmly cemented together , so that no water can pass outside of them , and a rubble - work of stone may with advantage be carried up a foot above them . Stone work , which may be rough and uncemented , but ...
... close to each other and be firmly cemented together , so that no water can pass outside of them , and a rubble - work of stone may with advantage be carried up a foot above them . Stone work , which may be rough and uncemented , but ...
Otras ediciones - Ver todas
Draining for Profit, and Draining for Health George E 1833-1898 Waring Sin vista previa disponible - 2015 |
Términos y frases comunes
acre agricultural amount basin bottom brick bushels carried cause cents chapter clay collars commenced condition connection considerable contour lines cost course covered crop cultivation deposit depth discharge diseases distance ditch drainage dyke earth effect evaporation fall farm farmer feet deep fever fiber crops field fifth column filled flow foot four feet Gisborne grade ground Hackensack River heat heavy rain houses improvement inches joints kiln labor laid land laying length less lower main drain malarious manure marsh matters moisture muddy water nearly necessary obstruction operation outlet particles pipes placed plants plow porous practice prevent quantity rain-fall removed result roots salt marsh saturated season sewage sewers shown in Fig side silt silt-basin slope soakage spring stakes steepest descent stone subsoil sufficient surface tide tile tile-draining tion typhoid fever undrained upper end vegetable whole width
Pasajes populares
Página 252 - A practical guide for beginners and a standard reference of great interest to persons already engaged in celery growing. It contains many illustrations giving a clear conception of the practical side of celery culture. The work is complete in every detail, from sowing a few seeds in a window-box in the house for early plants, to the handling and marketing of celery in carload lots. Fully illustrated. 150 pages. 5x7 inches. Cloth $0.50 Tomato Culture By WILL W. TRACY. The author has rounded up in...
Página 34 - Such were the effects at an early period of the year on a black bog. They suggest some idea of what they are, when in July or August thunder-rain at 60° or 70° falls on a surface heated to 130°, and carries down with it into the greedy fissures of the earth its augmented temperature. These advantages porous soils possess by nature, and retentive soils only acquire them by drainage.
Página 252 - It includes the manner of growth, soils and fertilizers adapted, best varieties, seed selection and breeding, planting, harvesting, insects and fungous pests, composition and feeding value; with a special chapter on markets by Albert W. Fulton. A practical book for the grower and student alike. Illustrated. 144 pages. 5x7 inches. Cloth $0.50 Celery Culture By WR BEATTIE. A practical guide for beginners and a standard reference of great interest to persons already engaged in celery growing. It contains...
Página 65 - ... other. The obvious remedy is to destroy their united action ; to break through their line of communication. Remove your water of attraction to such a depth that evaporation cannot act upon it, or but feebly. What is that depth ? In ascertaining this point we are not altogether without data. No doubt depth diminishes the power of evaporation rapidly. Still, as water taken from a...
Página 252 - ... the handling and marketing of celery in carload lots. Fully illustrated. 150 pages. 5x7 inches. Cloth $0.50 Tomato Culture By WILL W. TRACY. The author has rounded up in this book the most complete account of tomato culture in all its phases that has ever been gotten together. It is no...
Página 66 - A farmer manures a field of four or five inches of free soil reposing on a retentive clay, and sows it with wheat. It comes up, and between the kernel and the manure it looks well for a time, but anon it sickens. An Irish child looks well for five or six years, but after that time potato-feeding, and filth, and hardship begin to tell. You ask what is amiss with the wheat, and you are told that when its roots reach the clay they are poisoned.