Showing 321 - 340 results of 1,165 for search '"clay"', query time: 0.05s Refine Results
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    Spatially Explicit Estimation of Clay and Organic Carbon Content in Agricultural Soils Using Multi-Annual Imaging Spectroscopy Data by Heike Gerighausen, Gunter Menz, Hermann Kaufmann

    Published 2012-01-01
    “…Information on soil clay and organic carbon content on a regional to local scale is vital for a multitude of reasons such as soil conservation, precision agriculture, and possibly also in the context of global environmental change. …”
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    Cultural Practices for Vegetable and Small Fruit Crops: Using Kaolin Clay to Reduce Sprinkler Irrigation for Strawberry Transplant Establishment by Bielinski M. Santos, Teresa P. Salame-Donoso, Craig D. Stanley, Alicia J. Whidden, Crystal A. Snodgrass, Mary B. Henry

    Published 2011-01-01
    “…This 3-page fact sheet presents research results on the effect of kaolin clay application on sprinkler irrigation volumes applied to newly transplanted strawberries. …”
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    EFFECT OF MINERAL COMPOSITION ON SEQUENTIAL EXTRACT OF LEAD AND CADMIUM IN SOME IRAQI SOILS by Abdul Baqi D.S. Al Maamouri, Salwa H. K. Al Shamary

    Published 2024-12-01
    Subjects: “…carbonate minerals, organic matter, oxides, clay minerals.…”
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    THERMAL INSULATING MATERIAL WITH HIGH MECHANICAL STRENGTH MADE FROM CLAY BRICK WASTE AND COAL ASH USING THE MICROWAVE ENERGY by LUCIAN PAUNESCU, MARIUS FLORIN DRAGOESCU, SORIN MIRCEA AXINTE

    Published 2020-06-01
    Subjects: “…aluminosilicate waste, clay brick waste, coal ash, glass-ceramic foam, microwave, high mechanical strength…”
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    Article
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    Previous Crop and Cultivar Effects on Methane Emissions from Drill-Seeded, Delayed-Flood Rice Grown on a Clay Soil by Alden D. Smartt, Kristofor R. Brye, Christopher W. Rogers, Richard J. Norman, Edward E. Gbur, Jarrod T. Hardke, Trenton L. Roberts

    Published 2016-01-01
    “…In order to adequately estimate CH4 emissions, it is important to include data representing the range of environmental, climatic, and cultural factors occurring in rice production, particularly from Arkansas, the leading rice-producing state in the US, and from clay soils. The objective of this study was to determine the effects of previous crop (i.e., rice or soybean (Glycine max L.)) and cultivar (i.e., Cheniere (pure-line, semidwarf), CLXL745 (hybrid), and Taggart (pure-line, standard-stature)) on CH4 fluxes and emissions from rice grown on a Sharkey clay (very-fine, smectitic, thermic Chromic Epiaquerts) in eastern Arkansas. …”
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