Agriculture for Beginners by Daniel Harvey Hill (ebook reader 7 inch .TXT) π
The joint action of air, moisture, and frost was still another agent of soil-making. This action is called weathering. Whenever you have noticed the outside stones of a spring-house, you have noticed that tiny bits are crumbling from the face of the stones, and adding little by little to the soil. This is a slow way of making additions to the soil. It is estimated that it would take 728,000 years to wear away limestone rock to a depth of thirty-nine inches. But when you recall the countless years through which the weather has striven against the rocks, you can readily understand that its never-wearying activity has added immensely to the soil.
In the rock soil formed in these various ways, and indeed on the rocks themselves, tiny plants that live on food taken from the air began to grow. They grew just as you now see mosses and lichens grow on the surface of rocks. The decay of these plants added some fertility to the newly formed soil. The life and death of
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Cereal: the name given to grasses that are raised for the food contained in their seeds, such as corn, wheat, rice.
Cobalt: a poisonous chemical used to kill insects.
Cocoon: the case made by an insect to contain its larva or pupa.
Commercial fertilizer: an enriching plant food bought to improve soil.
Compact: a soil is said to be compact when the particles are closely packed.
Concentrated: when applied to food the word means that it contains much feeding value in small bulk.
Contagious: a disease is said to be contagious when it can be spread or carried from one individual to another.
Cross: the result of breeding two varieties of plant together.
Cross pollination: the pollination of a flower by pollen brought from a flower on some other plant.
Croup: the top of the hips.
Culture: the art of preparing ground for seed and raising crops by tillage.
Curb disease: a swelling on the back part of the hind leg of a horse just behind the lowest part of the hock joint. It generally causes lameness.
Curculio: a kind of beetle or weevil.
Dendrolene: a patented substance used for catching cankerworms.
Digestion: the act by which food is prepared by the juices of the body to be used by the blood.
Dormant: a word used to describe sleeping or resting bodies,βbodies not in a state of activity.
Drainage: the process by which an excess of water is removed from the land by ditches, terraces, or tiles.
Element: a substance that cannot be divided into simpler substances.
Ensilage: green foods preserved in a silo.
Evaporate: to pass off in vapor, as a fluid often does; to change from a solid or liquid state into vapor, usually by heat.
Exhaustion: the state in which strength, power, and force have been lost. When applied to land, the word means that land has lost its power to produce well.
Fermentation: a chemical change produced by bacteria, yeast, etc. A common example of fermentation is the change of cider into vinegar.
Fertility: the state of being fruitful. Land is said to be fertile when it produces well.
Fertilization: the act which follows pollination and enables a flower to produce seed.
Fetlock: the long-haired cushion on the back side of a horse's leg just above the hoof.
Fiber: any fine, slender thread or threadlike substance, as the rootlets of plants or the lint of cotton.
Filter: to purify a liquid, as water, by causing it to pass through some substance, as paper, cloth, screens, etc.
Formalin: a forty per cent solution of a chemical known as formaldehyde. Formalin is used to kill fungi, bacteria, etc.
Formula: a recipe for the making of a compound; for example, fertilizer or spraying compounds.
Fungicide: a substance used to kill or prevent the growth of fungi; for example, Bordeaux Mixture or copper sulphate.
Fungous: belonging to or caused by fungi.
Fungus (plural fungi): a low kind of plant life lacking in green color. Molds and toadstools are examples.
Germ: that from which anything springs. The term is often applied to any very small organism or living thing, particularly if it causes great effects such as disease, fermentation, etc.
Germinate: to sprout. A seed germinates when it begins to grow.
Girdle: to make a cut or groove around a limb or tree.
Glacier: an immense field or stream of ice formed in the region of constant snow and moving slowly down a slope or valley.
Globule: a small particle of matter shaped like a globe.
Glucose: a kind of sugar very common in plants. The sugar from grapes, honey, etc. is glucose. That from the sugar cane is not.
Gluten: a vegetable form of protein found in cereals.
Graft: to place a living branch or stem on another living stem so that it may grow there. It insures the growth of the desired kind of plant.
Granule: a little grain.
Gypsum: land plaster.
"Head back": to cut or prune a tree so as to form its head, that is, the place where the main trunk first gives off its branches.
Heredity: the resemblance of offspring to parent.
Hibernating: to pass the winter in a torpid or inactive state in close quarters.
Hock: the joint in the hind leg of quadrupeds between the leg and the shank. It corresponds to the ankle in man.
Host: the plant upon which a fungus or insect is preying.
Humus: the portion of the soil caused by the decay of animal or vegetable matter.
Hybrid: the result of breeding two different kinds of plants together.
Hydrogen: a chemical element. It is present in water and in all living things.
Individual: a single person, plant, animal, or thing of any kind.
Inoculate: to give a disease by inserting the germ that causes it in a healthy being.
Insectivorous: anything that eats insects.
Kainit: salts of potash used in making fertilizers.
Kernel: a single seed or grain, as a kernel of corn.
Kerosene emulsion: see Appendix.
Larva (plural larvæ): the young or immature form of an insect.
Larval: belonging to larva.
Layer: to propagate plants by a method similar to cutting, but differing from cutting in that the young plant takes root before it is separated from the parent plant.
Legume: a plant belonging to the family of the pea, clover, and bean; that is, having a flower of similar structure.
Lichen: a kind of flowerless plant that grows on stones, trees, boards, etc.
Loam: an earthy mixture of clay and sand with organic matter.
Magnesia: an earthy white substance somewhat similar to lime.
Magnify: to make a thing larger in fact or in appearance; to enlarge the appearance of a thing so that the parts may be seen more easily.
Membrane: a thin layer or fold of animal or vegetable matter.
Mildew: a cobwebby growth of fungi on diseased or decaying things.
Mold: see mildew.
Mulch: a covering of straw, leaves, or like substances over the roots of plants to protect them from heat, drought, etc., and to preserve moisture.
Nectar: a sweetish substance in blossoms of flowers from which bees make honey.
Nitrate: a readily usable form of nitrogen. The most common nitrate is saltpeter.
Nitrogen: a chemical element, one of the most important and most expensive plant foods. It exists in fertilizers, in ammonia, in nitrates, and in organic matter.
Nodule: a little knot or bump.
Nutrient: any substance which nourishes or promotes growth.
Organic matter: substances made through the growth of plants or animals.
Ovary: the particular part of the pistil that bears the immature seed.
Ovipositor: the organ with which an insect deposits its eggs.
Oxygen: a gas present in the air and necessary to breathing.
Particle: any very small part of a body.
Perennial: living through several years. All trees are perennial.
Petal: a single leaf of the corolla.
Phosphoric acid: an important plant food occurring in bones and rock phosphates.
Pistil: the part of the blossom that contains the immature seeds.
Pollen: the powdery substance borne by the stamen of the flower. It is necessary to seed production.
Pollination: the act of carrying pollen from stamens to pistils. It is usually done by the wind or by insects.
Porosity: the state of having small openings or passages between the particles of matter.
Potash: an important part of plant foods. The chief source of potash is kainit, muriate of potash, sulphate of potash, wood ashes, and cotton-hull ashes.
Propagate: to cause plants or animals to increase in number.
Protein: the name of a group of substances containing nitrogen. It is one of the most important of feeding stuffs.
Pruning: trimming or cutting parts that are not needed or that are injurious.
Pulverize: to reduce to a dustlike state.
Pupa: an insect in the stage of its life that comes just before the adult condition.
Purity (of seed): seeds are pure when they contain only one kind of seed and no foreign matter.
Ration: a fixed daily allowance of food for an animal.
Raupenleim: a patented sticky substance used to catch the cankerworm.
Resistant: a plant is resistant to disease when it can ward off attacks of the disease; for example, some varieties of the grape are resistant to the phylloxera.
Rotation (of crops): a well-arranged succession of different crops on the same land.
Scion: a shoot, sprout, or branch taken to graft or bud upon another plant.
Seed bed: the layer of earth in which seeds are sown.
Seed selection: the careful selection of seed from particular plants with the object of keeping or increasing some desirable quality.
Seedling: a young plant just from the seed.
Sepal: one of the leaves in the calyx.
Set: a young plant for propagation.
Silo: a house or pit for packing away green food for winter use so as to exclude air and moisture.
Sire: father.
Smut: a disease of plants, particularly of cereals, which causes the plant or some part of it to become a powdery mass.
Spike: a lengthened flower cluster with stalkless flowers.
Spiracle: an air opening in the body of an insect.
Spore: a small body formed by a fungus to reproduce the fungus. It serves the same use as seeds do for flowering plants.
Spray: to apply a liquid in the form of a very fine mist by the aid of a spraying pump for the purpose of killing fungi or insects.
Stamen: the part of the flower that bears the pollen.
Stamina: endurance.
Sterilize: to destroy all the germs or spores in or on anything. Sterilizing is often done by heat or chemicals.
Stigma: the part of the pistil that receives the pollen.
Stock: the stem or main part of a tree or plant. In grafting or budding the scion is inserted upon the stock.
Stover: as used in this book the word means the dry stalks of corn from which the ears have been removed.
Subsoil: the soil under the topsoil.
Sulphur: a yellowish chemical element; brimstone.
Taproot: the main root of a plant, which runs directly down into the earth to a considerable depth without dividing.
Terrace: a ridge of earth run on a level around a slope or hillside to keep the land from washing.
Thorax: the middle part of the body of an insect. The thorax lies between the abdomen and the head.
Thermometer: an instrument for measuring heat.
Tillage: the act of preparing land for seed, and keeping the ground in a proper state for the growth of crops.
Transplant: a plant grown in a bed with a view to being removed to other soil; a technical term used by gardeners.
Tubercle: a small, wart-like growth on the roots of legumes.
Udder: the milk vessel of a cow.
Utensil: a vessel used for household purposes.
Variety: a particular kind. For example, the Winesap, Bonum, Γsop, etc., are different varieties of apples.
Ventilate: to open to the free passage of air.
Virgin soil: a soil which has never been cultivated.
Vitality (of seed): vitality is the ability to grow. Seed are of good vitality if a large per cent of them will sprout.
Weathering: the action of moisture, air, frost, etc. upon rocks.
Weed: a plant out of place. A wheat plant in a rose bed or a rose in the wheat field would be regarded as a weed, as would any plant growing in a place in which it is not wanted.
Wilt (of cotton): a disease of cotton in which the whole plant droops or wilts.
Withers: the ridge between the shoulder bones of a horse, at the base of the neck.
Yeast: a preparation containing the yeast plant used to make bread rise, etc.
INDEXAcid phosphate, 23, 214, 225
Alfalfa, 28, 179, 187, 242, 244, 245, 246-248
Alfalfa root, 28
Animals, domestic, 261-292
why we feed, 290
Annual, 69, 112, 118, 260
Ant, 144, 150
Anther, 43
Apple, 42, 59, 76,
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