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  • 1
    Publication Date: 1923-07-01
    Description: (1) The colorimetric method is unsuited to the examination of heavy, alkaline soils owing to the turbidity of the suspension.(2) Where the nature of the suspension permits of colorimetric determinations being made, they agree with those obtained electrometrically: with the latter method practically identical results are obtained using soil-water mixtures or moderately clear extracts.(3) No disturbing effect is likely to be introduced by amounts of nitrate up to 500 parts per million of soil.(4) Owing to the effect on the pH of a soil suspension caused by varying the proportion of water and time of extraction, these conditions should be fixed for routine work. We have found 1 hour's extraction with 5 parts of water satisfactory.(5) On account of the amphoteric or buffer nature of clay, soil shifts the reaction of acids and alkalis in the direction of neutrality.(6) The effect of sodium salts on a soil is to displace aluminium and so reduce alkalinity: the residual soil after leaching is found to be more alkaline.(7) The effect of drying alkaline soil is to cause the pH of the extract to be lower than that obtained from the undried soil. If however the time of extraction is prolonged, the differences disappear almost entirely.
    Print ISSN: 0021-8596
    Electronic ISSN: 1469-5146
    Topics: Agriculture, Forestry, Horticulture, Fishery, Domestic Science, Nutrition
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  • 2
    Publication Date: 1921-07-01
    Description: 1. The Sudan method for clay determination worked out by Dr Beam in 1911 has been critically examined and compared with the methods in general use in England and America.2. The essential points of the method lie in (a) the use of sodium carbonate instead of ammonia as the deflocculating agent, and (b) the use of a camel-hair brush for puddling the clay. It differs from the English (and resembles the American) method in that no preliminary acid treatment is used, the height of the sedimentation column is 10 cms. and the time of subsidence 8 hours.3. It can be applied to a sedimentation or centrifugal process: the results agree well with each other and with those obtained by the American method.4. When modified by inclusion of acid treatment, by increasing the time of sedimentation from 8 to 24 hours and reducing the height of the column to 8·6 cms., the results agree well with those obtained by the English method.5. Treatment with acid either in the preliminary operations or for deflocculating clay suspensions may lead to uncertainty in the results in some cases as it causes loss of “clay” by solution.6. The Sudan sedimentation method can be carried out in about one-eighth the time required for the English method, and the centrifugal in about one-third the time required for the American. For general use the sedimentation method is preferred as requiring less attention.
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  • 3
    Publication Date: 1923-01-01
    Description: (1) The moisture equivalent of a normal soil diminishes as the weight of soil taken for the determination increases.(2) Some soils are particularly impermeable to water in thick layers: in these cases the moisture equivalent increases with the weight of soil taken and may become very large owing to waterlogging. A soil may, however, have a very high moisture equivalent without showing waterlogging.(3) Dilute solutions of flocculating salts such as calcium sulphate, or ammonium nitrate or sulphate, reduce the moisture equivalent, and sodium carbonate increases it.(4) The effect of sodium carbonate is complicated: with gradually increasing concentration, the moisture equivalent first diminishes and then increases to a maximum, after which there is further diminution.(5) The soil samples which easily showed waterlogging in the Briggs-McLane apparatus had a higher concentration of hydroxyl-ions (pH) than those which did not.(6) Whilst the colloidal content of a clay seems related to its moisture equivalent, no such connection appears to exist for substances such as kaolin or aluminium hydroxide.
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  • 4
    Publication Date: 1921-08-01
    Description: For many years this portion of Egypt had remained a blank so far as its geological structure was concerned, and when the geological map of Egypt was issued by the Survey Department in 1910 this extensive area was deliberately left uncoloured. Efforts were made by the writer to interest the various parties which were mapping the topography of this region, but the fossils submitted by them only indicated the presence of beds of Upper Cretaceous age, including a facies identical with that developed in the Abu Roash hills near Cairo.
    Print ISSN: 0016-7568
    Electronic ISSN: 1469-5081
    Topics: Geosciences
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  • 5
    Publication Date: 1924-07-01
    Description: The results of a yield trial may be usefully indicative; they can never be decisive. Geographical differences of soil and climate and seasonal fluctuations, limit the applicability of results to the locality and the year of the experiment. No more can be achieved than to ensure that the data accumulated in the prescribed circumstances have as high as possible a degree- of statistical probability. For this, there must be adequate precautions against a variety of factors predisposing to error. These factors may be broadly classified as follows:(a) Soil differences within the locality, i.e. major-scale differences as, for example, between the two ends of a 10-acre field.(b) Soil differences within small portions of the test area, e.g. as between contiguous areas of 1 square ft. or even as between the areas occupied by neighbouring single plants.(c) Differences in the seeds sown.(d) Damage by wire-worm, etc., resulting in the killing off of some plants especially in the very early stages of growth.(e) Irregularities in light intensity and inter-plant competition owing to irregular seed rate or depth of sowing, etc.(f) Losses during harvesting.(g) Irregularities in the water content of the harvested material.
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  • 6
    Publication Date: 1920-04-01
    Description: 1. Protein in wheat is the most important constituent, and therefore the chief constituent to breed for. No wheat variety possesses at once combined the desired characteristics of high protein, high yield, maximum flour production, and maximum bushel weight.2. So far as climatic factors are concerned, a short, comparatively dry growing season, especially in the spring, in the case of winter wheat, favours the development of grain rich in gluten, and hence high in protein.3. The most important ground factor in determining the starchprotein ratio is the water supply. The protein content has been found to vary from 11·63 per cent, under 22–24 inches of rainfall to 14·93 per cent, under 12–13 inches (Minnesota); and from 12·63 per cent, under 25 inches of irrigation to 13·62 per cent, under no irrigation (Utah).
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  • 7
    Publication Date: 1921-01-01
    Description: 1. A sample of marine silt taken from the foreshore of the N.W. coastal belt of the Wash was found as the result of a mineralogical examination to contain dolomite in its mineral assemblage.2. It was surmised from this discovery that should dolomite be a normal constituent of soils derived from marine silts, its presence might modify in them certain processes such as nitrification in which the neutralising effect of a quick acting base is an essential factor.3. This supposition was strengthened by certain culture experiments on nitrification, and was to some extent established as a fact by a detailed chemical investigation into the nature of the carbonate content of several soils of known geological and agricultural history.
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  • 8
    Publication Date: 1923-07-01
    Description: The maximum water-retaining capacity of a soil may be defined as the quantity of water, measured as a percentage of the mass of oven-dry material, that the soil can retain after it has been thoroughly wetted and then allowed to drain freely. It is generally estimated in the laboratory by Hilgard's method (1893). The air-dried sifted soil is packed by jarring into a small perforated cylindrical brass box which is then placed in a vessel containing water, so that the bottom layer of the soil is in contact with the liquid surface. After standing an hour, the cylinder is removed, surplus water wiped away, and the whole weighed. The cylinder and contents are then dried to constant mass in an air-oven at 110° C. The weighings are corrected for the mass of the cylinder and that of the filter paper employed to cover the sieve. From the results, the maximum water-retaining capacity may directly be calculated.
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  • 9
    Publication Date: 1923-07-01
    Description: 1. The investigation described is a continuation of the researches of certain workers in the British West Indies on the significance of the shrinkage coefficient of clays and soils. A brief outline of these researches and their results is given.2. Tempany's hypothesis, which explains shrinkage as due to contraction consequent on loss of water by evaporation from the saturated gel-skeleton that ramifies throughout a mass of soil at its point of maximum plasticity, is criticised on the grounds that it does not completely fit the facts. In particular, it fails to account for the abnormally low shrinkage coefficients exhibited by lateritic soils, notably the red upland soil of Barbados. Mason explained this abnormality by assuming that kneading does not entirely destroy aggregation of soil particles, which is especially well marked in the Barbados red soil. The writer demonstrated, however, that soils of similar colloid content, and belonging to one and the same geological type, but exhibiting different degrees of aggregation, possess similar shrinkage coefficients. A different hypothesis to explain soil shrinkage was therefore sought.3. The hypothesis finally accepted is based on the belief that colloidal gels possess a reticulate structure. At the point of saturation, a hydrogel probably contains water in two phases. The first of these is adsorbed in the walls of the gel; it has been shown by Wilsdon, in the case of soil colloids, to represent the moisture content at the hygroscopic coefficient stage. The second phase fills the vesicles of the gel, and is a crystalline phase.
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  • 10
    Publication Date: 1924-04-01
    Description: Final yield of grain and straw reflect, or are functions of, the combination of processes conveniently designated “growth.” A successful analysis of “growth” would afford an analysis of “yield” and it is quite patent that “yield” must continue to be imperfectly understood so long as growth remains unanalysed. But although the full solution of the “yield problem” thus rests with plant physiology, it seems within the bounds of possibility that comparative studies upon varieties may bring to light distinctive (varietal) features of “growth” which are correlated with distinctive (varietal) features of “yielding power.” One or more of these may possibly serve as an “index” of yielding power, as the touchstone which is so urgently needed in plant breeding. The reliability of comparative studies of this kind rests fundamentally upon accuracy of “sampling.” For all the experimental attributes of freely tillering cereals, sampling is extremely difficult and the difficulties are most acute for “weight” attributes. Clearly then, a test of accuracy of sampling at all stages of growth is an indispensable preliminary. It was this consideration that determined the lines of the investigation to be recorded here and it is in the light of it that the results will be discussed.
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