NEW-YORK:
WILEY AND PUTNAM.
MDCCCXLII.
J. P. Wright, Printer,
18 New Street, N. Y.
INTRODUCTION.
The scientific principles upon which the art of culture depends, have not hitherto been sufficiently understood or appreciated by practical men. Into the causes of this I shall not here inquire. I may remark, however, that if Agriculture is ever to be brought to that comparative state of perfection to which many other arts have already attained, it will only be by availing itself, as they have done, of the many aids which Science offers to it; and that, if the practical man is ever to realize upon his farm all the advantages which Science is capable of placing within his reach, it will only be when he has become so far acquainted with the connection that exists between the art by which he lives and the sciences, especially of Chemistry and Geology, as to be prepared to listen with candour to the suggestions they are ready to make to him, and to attach their proper value to the explanations of his various processes which they are capable of affording.
The following little Treatise is intended to present a familiar outline of the subjects of Agricultural Chemistry and Geology, as treated of more at large in my Lectures, of which the first Part is now before the public. What in this work has necessarily been taken for granted, or briefly noticed, is in the Lectures examined, discussed, or more fully detailed.
Durham, 8th April, 1842.
CONTENTS.
| CHAPTER I. | page |
| Distinction between Organic and Inorganic Substances | [13] |
| —The Ash of Plants—Constitution of the Organic | |
| Parts of Plants—Preparation and Properties of | |
| Carbon, Oxygen, Hydrogen, and Nitrogen— | |
| Meaning of Chemical Combination. | |
| CHAPTER II. | |
| Form in which these different Substances enter into | [25] |
| Plants—Properties of the Carbonic, Humic, and | |
| Ulmic Acids; of Water, of Ammonia, and of Nitric | |
| Acid—Constitution of the Atmosphere. | |
| CHAPTER III. | |
| Structure of Plants—Mode in which their Nourishment | [38] |
| is obtained—Growth and Substance of Plants— | |
| Production of their Substance from the Food they | |
| imbibe—Mutual Transformations of Starch, Sugar, | |
| and Woody Fibre. | |
| CHAPTER IV. | |
| Of the Inorganic Constituents of Plants—Their | [49] |
| immediate Source—Their Nature—Quantity of | |
| each in certain common Crops. | |
| CHAPTER V. | |
| Of Soils—Their Organic and Inorganic Portions—Saline | [67] |
| Matter in Soils—Examination and Classification of | |
| Soils—Diversities of Soils and Subsoils. | |
| CHAPTER VI. | |
| Direct Relations of Geology to Agriculture—Origin | [78] |
| of Soils—Causes of their Diversity—Relation to | |
| the Rocks on which they rest—Constancy in the | |
| Relative Position and Character of the Stratified | |
| Rocks—Relation of this Fact to Practical | |
| Agriculture—General Characters of the Soils | |
| upon these Rocks. | |
| CHAPTER VII. | |
| Soils of the Granitic and Trap Rocks—Accumulations | [103] |
| of Transported Sands, Gravels, and Clays—Use | |
| of Geological Maps in reference to Agriculture | |
| —Physical Characters and Chemical Constitution | |
| of Soils—Relation between the Nature of the | |
| Soil and the Kind of Plants that naturally grow | |
| upon it. | |
| CHAPTER VIII. | |
| Of the Improvement of the Soil—Mechanical and Chemical | [133] |
| Methods—Draining—Subsoiling—Ploughing, and | |
| Mixing of Soils—Use of Lime, Marl, and Shell-sand— | |
| Manures—Vegetable, Animal, and Mineral Manures. | |
| CHAPTER IX. | |
| Animal Manures—Their Relative Value and Mode of | [165] |
| Action—Difference between Animal and Vegetable | |
| Manures—Cause of this Difference—Mineral Manures— | |
| Nitrates of Potash and Soda—Sulphate of Soda, | |
| Gypsum, Chalk, and Quicklime—Chemical Action of | |
| these Manures—Artificial Manures—Burning and | |
| Irrigation of the Soil—Planting and Laying Down | |
| to Grass. | |
| CHAPTER X. | |
| The Products of Vegetation—Importance of Chemical | [216] |
| quality as well as quantity of Produce—Influence | |
| of different Manures on the quantity and quality | |
| of the Crop—Influence of the Time of Cutting— | |
| Absolute quantity of Food yielded by different Crops | |
| —Principles on which the Feeding of Animals depends | |
| —Theoretical and Experimental Value of different kinds | |
| of Food for Feeding Stock—Concluding Observations. | |