763 research outputs found

    Verdi, Aroldo, and Music Drama

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    What About Continuous Corn?

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    Interest in continuous corn in Iowa has been g rowing for several years. And increasing numbers of farmers have been trying it out on their own. Here\u27s a report on the results of our Iowa tests with continuous corn

    Productivity levels of some Iowa soils

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    This report presents crop yield estimates for corn, soybeans, oats, and hay on 290 selected soil types and phases. These yield estimates are believed attainable as a 5-year average with the technology available in 1971 and average weather conditions.https://lib.dr.iastate.edu/specialreports/1063/thumbnail.jp

    Improve Your Subsoil Moisture for Higher Yields

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    Moisture is becoming an increasingly important factor in crop production. ISU studies show farmers can save moisture for an upcoming corn crop by killing out a meadow crop early in the last year of a rotation

    Different Cropping Systems Require Different Amounts and Kinds of Fertilizers

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    With increasing concern about pollution, it is important that fertilizers not be used in excess. Results of a series of ISU studies provide guidelines for proper fertilizer rates

    Evolution of the Level lnterfluvial Divides on the Kansan Till Plain in Iowa and Missouri

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    The purpose of this paper is to discuss and evaluate various alternative hypotheses concerning the evolution of the level interfluvial divides on the Kansan Till plain in southern Iowa and northern Missouri. About four-fifths of the plain is dissected (3), but the undissected remnants have an almost flat surface. In contrast to this the undissected portion of the much younger surfaces of the Mankato and Cary till plains have an undulating topography with numerous closed depressions and isolated low knolls

    Crop Rotations - Facts and Fiction

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    A wide range of cropping systems will give high corn yields. Whether or not to rotate crops may depend on the land slope. We don\u27t have all the answers but here\u27s more about these and other crop rotation facts

    Comparison of meadow-kill treatments on a corn-oats-meadow-meadow rotation in northwestern Iowa

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    An experiment was conducted at the Moody Research Center (formerly Moody Experimental Farm) in northwestern Iowa to examine the effects of meadow-kill on crop yields and on soil moisture in the spring. The experiment utilized a corn-oats-meadow-meadow rotation with meadow-kill treatments applied to the second-year meadow at various times of the growing season. Twenty years (1958-1977) of data were used for the analyses presented in this bulletin. Three treatments were used in the experiment. In the first, the control treatment, the second-year meadow was harvested two or three times. The plots were plowed the following spring before corn was planted. The second treatment was a short fallow” treatment, in which second-year meadow was killed with herbicides in the early fall after the second cutting of hay. The third treatment was a longer fallow treatment, with meadow killed in midsummer after the first hay cutting. Plots receiving the second and third treatments also were spring plowed
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