Page:The Olive Its Culture in Theory and Practice.djvu/62

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THE OLIVE

ing, the flowers fall off and the tree gives its strength to wood.

The hygroscopicity of a soil, or the property of retaining moisture, is of great value in a hot and dry country. It is well known that the more a soil is manured and cultivated, the more moisture it retains. The following table will show the percentage of water contained in different soils.

Water contained
in 100 parts
of earth
Silicious sand .25
Gypsum .27
Calcareous sand .29
Dry chalk .40
Chalk, somewhat more fertile .50
Clay soil .60
Clay, pure .70
Calcareous soil .85
Manure 1.90
Garden soil .89
Arable land .52


The capacity to absorb humidity from the atmosphere varies with different soils. The following are the results of experiments.

Absorbs in 24 hours.
Silicious sand .0 of water
Calcareous sand 1.5 " "
Gypsum 0.5 " "
Dry chalk 13.0 " "
Chalky earth 15.0 " "
Clayey earth 18.0 " "
Clay 21.0 " "
Fine calcareous earth 15.5 " "
Magnesia 38.0 " "
Manure 48.5 " "
Garden earth 22.5 " "
Ordinary earth 11.0 " "