A First Report on the Relations Between Climates and Crops |
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Page 6
... action of sunlight on the leaves , the absorption of moisture by the roots , the transpiration from the leaves , the ripening of the seeds , the nutritious value of the crop , and the acclimatization of plants . 2. The experimental ...
... action of sunlight on the leaves , the absorption of moisture by the roots , the transpiration from the leaves , the ripening of the seeds , the nutritious value of the crop , and the acclimatization of plants . 2. The experimental ...
Page 15
... action of the energy from the sun , coercing the atoms of the soil , the water , and the air into such new chemical combinations as will build up the leaf , the woody fiber , the starch , the pollen , the flower , the fruit and the seed ...
... action of the energy from the sun , coercing the atoms of the soil , the water , and the air into such new chemical combinations as will build up the leaf , the woody fiber , the starch , the pollen , the flower , the fruit and the seed ...
Page 24
... action of heat , light , and electricity upon vegetation . I pointed out many of these defi- ciencies in 1855 in my Géographie Botanique Raisonnée . Ten years later Prof. Julius Sachs , in his recently published and valuable work on ...
... action of heat , light , and electricity upon vegetation . I pointed out many of these defi- ciencies in 1855 in my Géographie Botanique Raisonnée . Ten years later Prof. Julius Sachs , in his recently published and valuable work on ...
Page 25
... action of heat on each function , and of which there are already some in illustration of the most simple phenomena , such as germination , the growth of stems , and the course of the sap in the interior of certain cells . We should then ...
... action of heat on each function , and of which there are already some in illustration of the most simple phenomena , such as germination , the growth of stems , and the course of the sap in the interior of certain cells . We should then ...
Page 26
... action of various rays upon the production of oxygen by leaves and upon the production of the green coloring matter have only confirmed the discoveries made in 1836 , without either prism or heliostat , by Professor Daubeny , from which ...
... action of various rays upon the production of oxygen by leaves and upon the production of the green coloring matter have only confirmed the discoveries made in 1836 , without either prism or heliostat , by Professor Daubeny , from which ...
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Common terms and phrases
actinometric degrees agricultural altitude ammonia annual April atmosphere August average barley blossoming carbonic acid cent cereals chemical chlorophyll climate Collomia Crataegus crop cultivation date of sowing December duration epoch evaporation experiments favorable fertilizers following table frost germination given gives grain grams growth harvest heat Hervé Mangon inches increase influence intensity January July July 14 July 23 June June 22 kilograms latitude leaf Leguminosa light Linsser maize Marié-Davy maximum mean daily temperatures mean temperature meteorological meters method moisture Montsouris nitrates nitrogen November observations October oxygen perature plants plats quantity radiation rain rainfall Réaum ripening roots season seed Sept September September 29 Sesamum shade shows soil solar sown species stant stations sum total sunlight sunshine sunshine recorder surface tempera temperature Thermal constants thermometer tion ture varieties vegetation wind winter wheat
Popular passages
Page 27 - ... exact degree of its action by day and by night. An atmosphere of carbonic acid gas might also be created, such as is supposed to have existed in the coal period. Then it might be seen to what extent our present vegetation would take an excess of carbon from the air, and if its general existence was inconvenienced by it. Then it might be ascertained what tribes of plants could bear this condition, and what other families could not have existed, supposing that the air had formerly had a very strong...
Page 68 - There has been comparatively little study of the chemical principles of plants from a purely botanical view. It promises to become a new field of research. The Leguminosae are conspicuous as furnishing us with important dyes, eg, indigo, logwood, catechin. The former is obtained principally from different species of the genus Indigofera, and logwood from the Hcematoxylon and Saraca indica.
Page 306 - SC, obtained some of these seeds from Georgia and planted them. This crop failed to mature, and the first successful crop of long staple cotton grown in South Carolina was planted in 1790, by William Elliott, on the northwest corner of Hilton Head, on the exact spot where Jean Ribault landed the first colonists and erected a column of stone, claiming the territory for France a century before the English settled on the coast. Mr. Elliott's crop sold for 10£d.
Page 68 - The discovery1 of haematoxylin in the Saraca indica illustrates very well how this plant in its chemical, as well as botanical, character is related to the Hcematoxylon campechianum ; also, I found a substance like catechin in the Saraca. This compound is found in the Acacias, to which class Saraca is related by its chemical position as well as botanically. Saponin is found in both of, these plants as well as in many other plants of the Leguminoss.
Page 27 - ... seen, the observer would himself be inside the apparatus and could arrange the plants as desired. He might observe several species at the same time — plants of all habits, climbing plants, sensitive plants, those with colored foliage, as well as ordinary plants. The experiment might be prolonged as long as desirable, and probably unlooked-for results would occur as to the form or color of the organs, particularly of the leaves. Permit me to recall on this subject an experiment made in 1853...
Page 25 - I propose would allow of light being passed through colored glasses or colored solutions, and so prove the effect of the different visible or invisible rays which enter into the composition of sunlight. For the sake of exactness nothing is superior to the decomposition of the luminous rays by a prism, and the fixing the rays by means of the heliostat.
Page 316 - The ideal climate for wheat is one with a long and rather wet winter, with little or no frost, prolonged into a cool and rather wet spring, which gradually fades into a warmer summer, the weather growing...
Page 137 - In our earlier papers we had concluded that, excepting the small amount of combined nitrogen coming down in rain and the minor aqueous deposits from the atmosphere, the source of the nitrogen of our crops was, substantially, the stores within the soil and subsoil, whether derived from previous accumulations, or from recent supplies by manure. More recently...
Page 26 - Accordiag to the experiments we have on this subject, they would appear to have but little power over any of the functions ; but it would be worth while to investigate further the calorific regions of the spectrum by employing Dr. Tyndall's process, that is, by means of iodine dissolved in bisulphide of carbon, which permits no trace of visible light to pass. How interesting it would be to make all these laboratory experiments on a large scale ! Instead of looking into small cases, or into a small...
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