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The Law Of Color In Flowers
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Directions For Filling Hanging Baskets
Wardian Cases
Aquatics Water Lilies
Soil For Growing Aquatic Plants
Hardy Climbing Vines Ivies
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Annual Flowering Plants Pansy Culture
Pansy Culture
Fall Or Holland Bulbs
Tropical Bulbs Tuberoses
Tuberoses
C Roses Cultivation And Propagating
Tea Roses
Hybrid Perpetual And Moss Roses
Moss Roses
Propagating The Rose
Japan And Other Lilies Calla Lilies
The Calla Lily
How To Prepare Callas For Winter Blooming
Geraniums The Best Twelve Sorts
Double Varieties
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Azaleas How To Cultivate Them
Camellias Orange And Lemon Trees
Orange And Lemon Trees
Fuchsias Training And Management
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The Night-blooming Cereus
Propagating Rex Begonias
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How To Make A Rockery
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The Lawn
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Botanical Names
Frozen Plants
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An Arch
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Sentiment And Language Of Flowers
The Lime In Soils
Sour Soils
Evidences Of Acidity
Tests For Acidity
Sources Of Lime
Definitions
Ground Limestone
Storing Lime In The Soil
Fresh Burned Lime
Burning Lime
Lime Hydrate
Other Forms Of Lime
Magnesian Lime
What Shall One Buy?
Methods Of Application
Amount Of Lime Per Acre
Special Crop Demands
The Lawn: How To Make It And How To Take Care Of It
Planting The Lawn
Shrubs
Vines
The Hardy Border
The Garden Of Annuals
The Bulb Garden
The Rose: Its General Care And Culture
The Rose As A Summer Bedder
The Dahlia
The Gladiolus
Lilies
Plants For Special Purposes
Arbors Summer-houses Pergolas And Other Garden Features
Carpet-bedding
Flowering And Foliage Plants For Edging Beds And Walks
Planning The Garden
The Back-yard Garden
The Wild Garden A Plea For Our Native Plants
The Winter Garden
Window And Veranda Boxes
Spring Work In The Garden
Summer Work In The Garden
Fall Work In The Garden
The Lawn: How To Make It And How To Take Care Of It
Planting The Lawn
Shrubs
Vines
The Hardy Border
The Garden Of Annuals
The Bulb Garden
The Rose: Its General Care And Culture
The Rose As A Summer Bedder
The Dahlia
The Gladiolus
Lilies
Plants For Special Purposes
Arbors Summer-houses Pergolas And Other Garden Features
Carpet-bedding
Flowering And Foliage Plants For Edging Beds And Walks
Planning The Garden
The Back-yard Garden
The Wild Garden A Plea For Our Native Plants
The Winter Garden
Window And Veranda Boxes
Spring Work In The Garden
Summer Work In The Garden
Fall Work In The Garden
A Chapter Of Afterthoughts Which The Reader Cannot Afford To Miss
Soil Required Its Preparation
General Remarks On Manuring With Green Crops
Varieties
Influence Of Soil On Seedlings
How To Cross Varieties
Smooth Vs Rough Potatoes
Cut And Uncut Seed
Planting And Manuring
Cultivation
Plaster
The Potato-rot Its Cause
Remedy For The Potato-rot
Digging And Storing
Insects Injurious To The Potato
General Remarks On Insects
Value Of The Potato As Cattle Food


Other Forms Of Lime

from Right Use Of Lime In Soil Improvement



Air-Slaked Lime. A pure limestone is a carbonate, and the chemical

formula is CaCO3. When it is burned, the carbon dioxide (CO2) is

driven off, leaving CaO, which is calcium oxide, called fresh burned

lime. In this process 44 pounds of a stone weighing 100 pounds passes

into the air, and there remain 56 pounds of lime. When it air-slakes, it

takes back the carbon dioxide from the air, and the new product becomes

CaCO3, or carbonate of lime, and regains its original weight of 100

pounds. This is what would happen if the process were complete, and it

is nearly so when the exposure to the air is as perfect as possible.



Fifty-six pounds of valuable material are in the 100 pounds of

air-slaked lime, just as is the case with limestone, and there is no

difference in effectiveness except in so far as the air-slaked material

is absolutely fine and available, while most pulverized limestone is

less so. In making purchase for use of land the buyer cannot afford to

make any appreciable difference in price in favor of air-slaked lime,

as compared with a fine stone.



Air-Slaking a Slow Process. Lime changes to an air-slaked condition

slowly unless it has full exposure. Old heaps will remain in hydrate

form for many years, excepting the outside coat, which excludes the air.

Complete air-slaking would not reduce ability to correct soil acidity,

the total amount of calcium and magnesium remaining constant, but weight

would be added in the slaking, and therefore the value per ton would be

reduced. The slowness with which air-slaking proceeds gives reason to

expect that any bulk of old lime may contain a considerable percentage

of the hydrate, and therefore have greater strength than a true

carbonate like limestone. This is a consideration of value to a buyer.



Agricultural Lime. Some manufacturers have found in the demand for

lime by farmers an opportunity of disposing of much material that would

not be satisfactory to manufacturers and builders. In some cases this

so-called agricultural lime is sold at a price that is not beyond value,

but it varies much in its content of pure lime. If the unburned cores

of kilns are ground up, the material simply retains the value of

unburned stone. Any air-slaked material put into it has like value.

Forkings, ground up, have less value, and sometimes no value at all.

Some better material may go into this mixture that is given the name

"agricultural lime," and the product cannot be standardized or have a

valuation given it that would be true for another lot.



Some manufacturers are marketing limes of fair values under this

designation, but the values change as the material changes. There are

other manufacturers who are putting poor stuff on the market. Unless one

knows the manufacturer and his processes, he should not pay a great deal

for "agricultural lime." It is much better to buy a high-grade lime or

limestone that is more nearly constant in composition. When the word

"agricultural" is part of the brand, there is assurance that the

percentage of waste stuff in it is relatively high. Unless one knows to

the contrary, he should assume that a ton of finely pulverized limestone

is worth more per ton than "agricultural lime."



Marl. Marls vary in composition, as limestones do, but there are beds

of chalky marl that contain very little clay and sand and are nearly a

pure carbonate. It is only marls of high degree of purity that can be

put on the market with profit, but beds of less pure marl furnish

dressings for farms of the locality in many sections of the country.

Some of these inferior marls have had so much clay and sand mixed with

the lime carbonate that dressings must be heavy. The best lime marls

provide excellent material for the correction of soil acidity, the

actual value per ton being practically the same as that of the finest

pulverized limestone. Some dealers in marl make extravagant claims for

their goods, but any farmer may easily put these claims to the test and

learn that he should not expect more than a fairly good carbonate of

lime can do.



Marl improves the physical condition of stiff soils only when used in

large amount per acre, and this is true of any carbonate form, such as

limestone. Little effect upon physical condition should be expected from

the light application usually given when marl is purchased and

transported some distance to the farm. The chalk marl on the market is

used to correct soil acidity, and at the best it is worth only what good

lime carbonate is worth. It has no hidden virtues, and cannot take the

place of fertilizers. It is an excellent means of meeting the

lime-requirement of land when bought right, and its fine division makes

it distinctly superior to coarse stone.



There should be no confusion of a lime marl with the so-called "green

sand" marl. The latter is low in lime, and may be acid, the value of the

marl being in a considerable percentage of plant food contained.



Oyster Shell. Ground oyster shell is a good source of carbonate of

lime. The percentage falls below that of limestone, but in addition

there is a little nitrogen and phosphoric acid. An analysis of a good

quality of oyster shell, as found on the market, will show 90% carbonate

of lime.



Burned oyster shell has something near the same composition as lime made

from stone, but it goes back to hydrate and air-slaked forms rapidly.

There is no large amount of burned shell lime on the market, the

material known as shell lime being the ground shell, or lime carbonate.



Wood Ashes. A large supply of lime in excellent form was afforded by

hardwood ashes, but this product has ceased to have any important value

to our agriculture. The chief supply on the market is low in quality,

containing moisture and dirt in considerable amount, the form of lime

being changed from an oxide to the hydrate and carbonate.



Gas Lime. Prof. E. B. Voorhees, in "First Principles of Agriculture,"

says: "Gas lime is also frequently used as manure; in gas works,

quicklime is used for removing the impurities from the gas. Gas lime,

therefore, varies considerably in composition, and consists really of a

mixture of slaked lime, or calcium hydrate, and carbonate of lime,

together with sulfites and sulfides of lime. These last are injurious to

young plant life, and gas lime should be applied long before the crop is

planted, or at least exposed to the air some time before its

application. The action of air converts the poisonous substances in it

into non-injurious products. Gas lime contains on an average 40% of

calcium oxide, and usually a small percentage of nitrogen."



Lime After Magnesium Removal. A by-product in the removal of

magnesium from a magnesian limestone is an excellent material for

correction of soil acidity, on account of its physical condition. Its

exposure to the air causes much of the hydrate to change to an

air-slaked form, and its value per ton lies somewhere between that of

very finely pulverized limestone and hydrated lime.





Next: Magnesian Lime
Previous: Lime Hydrate


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