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Articles 1 - 10 of 10
Full-Text Articles in Life Sciences
Bulletin No. 80 - Irrigation Investigations In 1901, John A. Widtsoe
Bulletin No. 80 - Irrigation Investigations In 1901, John A. Widtsoe
UAES Bulletins
The fact that the ancient and, to arid countries, indispensible art of irrigation lacks a scientific basis, is the justification of the decision taken two years ago by the officers of the Utah Experiment Station, to make irrigation the central subject of their investigations.
Bulletin No. 78 - Experiments In Fattening Lambs, F. B. Linfield
Bulletin No. 78 - Experiments In Fattening Lambs, F. B. Linfield
UAES Bulletins
Sheep raising is among the most important agricultural industries of the state. Unlike the conditions in eastern states, the sheep industry of Utah is only indirectly associated with the farm. While the sheep owner generally lives on his farm, his sheep are kept on the public range and moved from place to place as feed and weather may make necessary. To be handled successfully on the range, sheep must be herded in large flocks. Under favorable conditions the expense account is comparatively light and returns substantial.
Viola Pedata L., Edwin Hubert Eames
Bulletin No. 77 - Horse Feeding, Lewis A. Merrill
Bulletin No. 77 - Horse Feeding, Lewis A. Merrill
UAES Bulletins
Previous experiments reported by this Station have shown the value of lucern, the principal forage crop of this section, when fed to cattle, sheep and hogs. The main part of this bulletin is devoted to the value of lucern when fed to horses, though a brief review of the work previously done at this Station in connection with the subject of horse-feeding is included. There has been, and is, some prejudice existing against lucern forming a part or all of the ration of horses, not only in the East, where the value of this crop is not yet fully appreciated, …
Viola Pedata L., Edwin Hubert Eames
Bulletin No. 76 - Forcing Lettuce, C. P. Close
Bulletin No. 76 - Forcing Lettuce, C. P. Close
UAES Bulletins
The winter growing of lettuce is not yet practiced in Utah. There is a good demand for lettuce in Salt Lake City, Ogden, and in some of the smaller towns during the winter, but this demand is supplied by the California grown product. It is yet to be determined whether or not lettuce can be grown profitably under glass in this State. The recent high prices of the winter product indicate that the forcing of a moderate amount of lettuce can be done with profit.
In the season of 1899-1900, the Experiment Station began a series of experiments with lettuce …
The Morphology Of The Pine Cone, Charles E. Bessey
The Morphology Of The Pine Cone, Charles E. Bessey
Papers in Systematics & Biological Diversity
So much has been said in regard to the morphology of the cone of the pine and its near allies that it would seem impossible as well as unnecessary to suggest anything further. However, the recent excellent summary in Coulter and Chamberlain's “Morphology of the Spermatophytes" of the many theories hitherto advanced to clear up the matter, and the conclusions reached by the authors named, show that it is by no means settled, and perhaps warrant me in presenting an interpretation which I have used in lectures before my own classes for half a dozen years or more.
Collection Book 1902, Cyrus Guernsey Pringle
Collection Book 1902, Cyrus Guernsey Pringle
Cyrus Pringle Collection Notebooks
This is the journal Cyrus Pringle kept during his collection trips in 1902.
Bulletin No. 74 - Lead Ore In Sugar Beet Pulp, John A. Widtsoe, Lewis A. Merrill
Bulletin No. 74 - Lead Ore In Sugar Beet Pulp, John A. Widtsoe, Lewis A. Merrill
UAES Bulletins
The recent great development of the beet sugar industry in the State of Utah, has made the matter of utilizing the sugar beet pulp an important question for Utah farmers. That beet pulp has a high feeding value, when fed in proper combinations, has been shown conclusively since the establishment of the first beet sugar factory in the State, ten years ago. The experience of other states, and of the beet sugar producing countries of Europe, has likewise demonstrated that beet pulp may be used profitably in the feeding of farm animals. It is doubtlessly true that much is yet …
Bulletin No. 75 - Arid Farming Or Dry Farming, John A. Widtsoe, Lewis A. Merrill
Bulletin No. 75 - Arid Farming Or Dry Farming, John A. Widtsoe, Lewis A. Merrill
UAES Bulletins
There are in Utah many lands that will not, for many years to come, be brought under irrigation; and there are many others that probably will never be irrigated. These are usually high-lying lands, often far from large streams, to irrigate which, would require the construction of exceptionally costly reservoirs, dams, and canals. Many Utah valleys are so far removed from the water supply of the State that it is improbable that water will be carried past other thirsting lands to these outlying places. The building of irrigation works is a venture in which profits and losses are considered; and …