SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT SOKOLOV, A.V. - SOKOLOV, A.V.

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CIA-RDP86-00513R001651930013-2
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December 31, 1967
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SCIENTIFIC ABSTRACT
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,!~, l'y L w V , (". "'i . ; ",(;KG -,(IV , It v. ~ utv. red . I.,, ;A' iKe !,,a eU ii, it. ;%L' .,"~ . , their geneei .9 and pro(iUctivu I-ochvy BashkirE;kol ASL21 ikh genezis i proizvod.-Avenricii-a kharakteristika. Mo- sk-va, Nauka,, 11?6,,. 2144 P. (MIRU 17; 10) 1. (for Sokolcv). USS"R/Electronics - Radio tubes Card 1/1 Pub. 133 - 7/18 Authors : Sokolov, A. V., Engineer Title : Travelling-wave tube Feriodical Vest. svyazi 12, 15-15, Dee 1954 Abstract The structural features aryl working principles of a traveling-wave tube, hav-. ing shortened non-inductive outlets and small spaces between the electrodes'. are described. Installations emnloying such travelling-wave tubes are listed. Travelling-wave tubes in analogy with conventional electron tubes can be divid- ed into three types: 1) high-capacity output tubes; 2) tubes for preliminary amplification and 3) receiver tubes with low natural noise level. The elec- tron mechanism of the tube has a sufficiently broad band so that band-pass of an installation working on such a travelling-wave tube is determined by energ3r-', innut and output elements. The functions of the tube are described. Diagrams: Institution : Ministry of Communications, USSR Submitted : MEMO, A. `.r. ~ ngineer, Jr. Sci. Aide of 'L-,he IFLI o'L the Corrunication indlastxy "Radio-Relay Cwnunication U-nes," Vest. SvYazi, 1,11o. 11, pp 6-7, 1953 Translation Yo. 420, 22 Jun 55 KC"' USSR/Electronics Cormunications Card 1/1 Pub. 133 - 4/16 Authors I Borodin, S. V.; Minashinp V. P.; and Sokolov,-A.'V. Title I High frequency apparatus for radio reley communication lines Periodical I Ve,st. svyazi 51 7-10, May 1955 Abstract I A description of the operation and construction of component pdrts of high frequency apparatus used in telephone communloations.relay stations, is given. The apparatus is used in conjunction with duplex operation of wide-band frequency) condensed at the central K-24.station for a simul- taneous transmission and reception of 24 telephone signals. Illust-ations; drawing; diagrams.. Institution: Submitted SOKOIDV, A.V. .... .. - -1 Frequency allocation and interference is radio relay lines. 11!ektf*- ovias' 10 AG-2:3-8 7 '56. (MIHA 9:6) (Radio relay systems) SOKOLOV, A. V. and KUZNETSOV, V. D. "Protective Ability and Decoupling in a Periscopic Antenna System," by V. D. Kuzuet5ov and A. V. Sokoiov, Elek-trosyyazO. No 1, Jan 5 1, pp 17-20 A series of experiments were conducted vrith a multichannel micro- wave radio-relay system "periscopic" antenna to determine protective ability from the interference of adjacent channels. It was estimated that for a relay system with 240 or more channels having a distance of 1,000 km or more, the protective ability of the antennas should be at least 60 decibels to assure a satisfactory two- frequency communication system. The form and dimensions of the antenna components were as follows: the upper reflector was continuous, flat, inclined 450 and 3.2 m in diameter; the lower reflector was a continuous, concave ellipsoid of rotation, with a 3.2-m diameter circle in its hori- zontal projection. The radiating element vas in the form of a one-meter horn with a 45 cm square mouth. The gain of the antenna system was about 30 db and the losses in the reflector system about 3 db, when op- erating in the frequency range of 2,000 Mc. Three types of relay towers, 45, 55, and 75 m high, 'vere involved in the test; the distance between the two upper reflectorsand the two lower reflectors for the 55-meter tower were 9.6 and 14 m, respectively. The results obtained in the experiment led to the conclusion that a periscopic antenna system of the described construction can protect reception up to 60 db, provided different polarizations are applied to the signals traveling in the oposite directions. -1 j4i ,- ICA T ,j KG L C. t"' 0 - V. AUTHORS: Vvedenskiy, B.A. and Sokolov, A.V. 109-11-4/8 TITLE: Investigations of the Tropo`sper~J_cropagation of Metre, Decimetre and Gentimetre Radio-waves in the USSR (Issledovaniya tropoefernogo rasprostraneniya metrovykh detsimetrovyk1i I i3an:Limetrovyk1i rad-lovoln v GSSR) PERIODICAL: Radiotekhnika i Zlektronika, 19-57, Vol.II, No.11, pp. 1375 - 1389 (USSR) ABSTRAUT: The first experiments on the propagation of modulated ultra-shortwaves (at a wavelength of 3.8 m) were first carried out in the USSR by M.V. Shuleykin in 1922. During 1926-27, Vvedenskiy and others investigated the possibility of ' at practical application of the attenuation or gain effects. 13obduoed- metric wavelengths by metallic dnd other objects. These investigations showed that-the electric field is inversely proportional to the square of the distance from the transmitting antennae and directly proportional to the height of the transmitting and receiving antennae. In 1931, Shein and Kuzovkin designed transmitters and receivers capable of operating at distances up to 20 km, while, in 1932-33, a regular communication link- at metre waves was established between Moscow and noginsk (a distance of 45 km). The experiments carried out by means of that system showed that Card 1/4 aL -.-Ww Alon by 00nsiderabul, ..b., 109-11-4/8 Investigaticas of the Tropospheric Propagation of Metro, Decimetre and Centimetre Radio-waves in the USSR. works have been devoted to the tropospheric propagation of the whole ultra-shortwave band, the investigation of the tropo- sphere, the stability of the field, relationship between the meteorol6gical conditions and the electrical parameters, investigation of the irregularities in the troposphere, atten- uation and scattering of the waves in clouds and the design of ultra-shortwave radio links. Thus, in 1946, Braude and Ostrovskiy evaluated the fields over the sea and dry land for wavelengths of 0.3 to 9 m, while A.N. Shchukin and others took into account the effect of the tropospheric irregulwities. During 1952-55, A.I. Kalinin derived formulae for the calcul- ation of the fields at short distances and at distances well beyond the line-of-sight; he also determined the limits of applicability of the optical diffraction theory. In 1952, M.A. Leontovich, G.A. Grinberg and others made a theoretical investigation of the influence of the Earth-surface irregulwities on the wave propagation. The problem of the influence of the meteorological conditions on the wave propagation was studied by V.N. Troitskiy, who investigated the reflection coefficients of various types of tropospheric irregularities as a function Card3/4 6(4,6) 7~ 0 7/111 _'-, 0 - o - 5 I-zr l AUTHOR: Sokolov V , Chief Designer, and Polukhin, V,A., __~ng=i-r of the Radio-Relay T_-ine U ]a L~e _~ ~ee TITLE: The 1,,"oscow-Smolensk Radio-relay Line PERIODICAL: Vestnik svyazi, 1-959, Nr 9, pp 5-7 (USFIMI) ABSTRACT: This article describes the radio-relay line between ;.Toscow and Smolensk, and presents information on tu- ning, operation and service of the line, The line is used for transmission of TV programs from the ~I.Toscow telecenter to the relay station Smolensk, and consists of two high-frequency trunks: one one-way trunk for image transmigsion and a two-way trunk for sound trans- mission and auxiliary communications which will also be used for multi-channel telephone communications. The line is equipped vilth the R-60 appay-atus intended for m7alti-chaimel telephone communication over dis- tances up to 2500 km, and TV program transmission up to 1000 km. The line, about 380 km long, includes ten Card 1/3 stations;structure and antenna equipment of the The Moscow-Smolensk Radio-Relay Line 90V/111-59-01-5/31 stations is briefly described as are the operating rooms at the stations (Fig 1) and at the terminal points. A block diagram of a terminal and an interme- diate station is presented (Pig 2). Power sources are briefly described. Several way stations are equipped with TV relay equipment for local broadcast service. A full complement of reserve equipment is provided at each station, and the whole system of intermediate stations can be Put on automatic operation (outlined), The authors outline the process of preliminary and fi- Pal orientation of the antenna equipment at each sta- tion on the line, and briefly describe the thorough checking of the equipment at each station and its ope- ration. In the course of antenna orientation it was observed that if the upper reflector of the antenna system was located higher than 70 m, a marked decrease in signal strength at the receiver input was evident; in such cases new, and larger reflectors were instal- led. On the basis of experience gained in these tu- Card 2/3 ning operations the authors present recommendations The P.Toscow-Smolensk Radio-Relay Tine ~~OV/111-59-9-5/31 for the tuning procedure on similar radio-relay lines using the R-60. Some basic performance data and spe- cifications for the RF section, image channel and sound channel are given, In conclusion the authors outline operational procedure on the radio-relay line. There are 1 photograph, 1 block diagram, and 4 graphs. ASSOCIATION: Nauchno-issledovatellskiy institut (ITII) ministerstva, svyazi S33R (Scientific-Research Institute of the ?~~inistry of Communications of the USSR) Card 3/3 -SOKOLOV, k.V. &-periment in conducting a complete wire broadcasting service in the Kostroma Province. Vest. sviazi 19 no.7:24-25 Jl 159. (MIRA 13:8) I. Sekretarl KDstromskogo obkoma XDmmunisticheskoy Fartii Sovetakogo Soyuza. (Kostroma Province--Wire broadcasting) PHASE I BOOK EXPLOITATION SOV/3550 Bor3dich, Sergey Vladimirovich, Vladimir Pavlovich Minashin, and Arseniy Vasillyevich Sokolov Radijreleynaya svyazl (Radio Relay Communications)Moscow, Svyazl- izdat3 1960. 434 p. --Errata slip inserted. 17,000 c,)pies printed. Resp. Ed.: S.V. Borodich; Ed.: V.I. Bashchuk; Tech. Ed.: K.G. Markoch. PURPOSE: This is a textbook approved by the Ministry of Communica- tions., USSR, for use in communications tekhnikurfis. It was pre- pared in accordance-with the program of the course "Radio Relay Communications." COVERAGE: The book describes the fundamentals of radio relay-commv- ni6ations, the structure of all the components of a radio relay line, principl=-s of design of radio relay lines, and the electri- cal characteristics of communication channels and methods of measuring them. Particular attention is paid to radio relay commu- cation systems using frequency-division multiplexing and fre- quency modulation, systems considered the most gresisiag' ind Card IYA I- KOLOY, A. V.) INEDEDISKIY, B. A., ARMAJID, IN. A., K411112-1) A. I., KOLOSOV, MI. A., M SIHABELNIKOV, A. V, and SHIRAY, P. A. "Long Range Tropospheric Propagation of Ultra Short Radio Waves." report presented at Commission II, 13th General Assembly of the international Scientific Radio Union in London, 5-15 Sept ig6o. Report available, Encl. to B-3,176,875, 30 jan 61 ARMAND, N.A.; WZIDENSKIY, B.A.; KALINIH~ A.I.; KOLOSOV, M.A.; SOKOLOV., A.V..; SHABELINIKOV. A.V.; SHUEY, R.A. Long-range tropospheric propagation of microwaves; a survey. Radiotekh.i elektron. 6 no.6:876-885 Je 161. (MIRA 14:6) (Microwaves) MUM S/109/61/006/006/001/ol6 D204/D303 AUTHORS: Armand, N.A., Vvedenskiy, B.A., Kalinin, A.I., Sokolov, A-V.? Shabellnikov, A,V., and Shirey, R.A. TITLE- A survey of work on the tropoapheric propagation of ultrashort radiowaven PERIODICAL: Radiotekhnika i clektronika, v. 6, no. 6, 1961, 867 - 885 TEXT: The large body of experimental work done in this field has been aided by the perfecting of apparatus and auxiliary instru- cents and given impetus by the need for more knowledge to assist the development of telephony, television and radio communications. The authors examine the following: 1) Relations between field strength and distance; 2) Signal level and frequency: the theore- tical picture is confused, state the authors, but most experimen- tal work suggests that Pr/P, (Pr - received power, Po - value in Card 1/8 '4. qr qr 2U460 S/109/61/006/006/001/016 A iiurvey of work on the D20,t/D303 free apace) declines as the frequency r1aeu. No uniform value of eabilit Pr(/I) has been found as yetp probably becauue of the chunp y of the troponpheric structure and meteorological conditions; 3) Signal and time: Signal fading may be rapid or slow. Most informs- tion concerns 300 - 500 km traces. Slow fading in caused by the appearance or disappearance of inversion layers, large irregulari- ties and changes in the value of dE/dh. Usually the signal strength is greater in the evening and at night, clearer in summer than in winter and at shorter (100-150 km) rather than longer (400 - 500 km) distances. The amplitude is related to frequency; also, as it combines with slow fading, the average amount of fading increases reaching, according to some sources, a maximum at 100-130 km. Others maintain that it declines with increase in distance to an equal summer and winter value of 3 - 10 db at 900 km; 4) Lose of antennae amplification: The phenomenon occurs beyond the horizon and means that for an antenna with an amplification coefficient G, exceeding 35-40 db, amplification is less than in free space. To account for this there are two hypotheses: (1) Spreading of radio- Card 2/8 21L460 S/!09/61/006/006/001/016 A survey of work on the ... D204/D303 waves in a statistically non-homogeneous medium leads to distor- tion of "he wave front in the plane of the receiving antenna and thus the energy absorbed is less than in the absence of amplitude and phase fluctuation, (2) elementary waves witli varJous random angles of approach may reach the receiving antenna_~hese hypothe- ses have been investigated but comparison of results is hampered by differences in experimental conaitions. For a 300 km trace the amplification loss increases with increase in the average amplifi- cation of receiving and transmitting antennae and with an increase of D to 300 - 500 km and f = 2290 negacycles. At greater distances the loss falls; 5) Signal distortion: Work in this field either treats the troposphere as an ideal quadruple network or aims to determine the amplitude correlation of the signal components on different frequencies in the transmitted spectrum. If with anten- with low directivity the amplitude of delayed waves is d:kmi- niAed by diffraction weakening of the earth's surface and the J'a.ir-ectlvityll of the troposphere, then at antennae with narrow patterns the amplitude of these waves decreases because of the di- Card 3/8 2W16O 13/109/61/006/,- 0610011016 It survey of work on the D204/D303 rectivity of the antenna. The maximum transmitted frequency band depends on the width of the directivity pattern of the antenna. The random nature of the tropospherio~ radiation means that 3iGnal dis- tortion has a random pattern as experiments in the UOSR have con- firmed~ Two oeparated antennae in space diminish distortion and guarantee a large carrying capacity of tropospheric radio links; 6) Radio-meteorclogical research; Refractometric measurements have dealt with the structure of the troposphere and, in particular, the If 7alue of E(h), and the area of turbulence S)2 varies within the range 0.3 - 311 units and irregular layers are u--ually I - 300 m thick. "Jump" intensity in these regions is usually 2 - 50 or 60 N units, lar6c especially in the "invisible clouds". It was stated that at a height K = 3000 m and more E)2/1 is too small to explain distant flelds and its alteration with height does not give the necessary 'value of F (D). The authors r Card 4/8 2LiM S/, oc~ - 'or-/oo6/ocj,-/016 ~,urvey of work on the D2 4YDcl/ UO 30~ d.-,al in,~oherent scatter and globular irregulari ties. In -,i ;.uz' fevr y-az-s mvAc'; attention has been devoted to the concep- Ocal-,-or. Two chief thcorlea ha~c been establi- Cn- r,,Lves for the frequency zub,)rd'aate of Pr/P,, a c anci ihe theory of 114istur~ance o'f the gradl- 'lie i3ceond approaches more closely to the ex- fa~ts-. ard izi E;eneraily preferred. Maxwell's equations jj 7 j s I I y layers abo-;e a spherical earth e0 )-6 yet be~,n 7- e s oe dand a solution m,,kq1 cc,[.bne the th ry j'- diffraction apread vilth pereoptical theory, All theoriee, in' :1:.-e1LCC, approach hosc of a ''radar farm type" e pr p Q1) J 2 dVv (1) R R wiiere Q is a con2tamt fac-,orj d(6) - ''scatter area" a junction fQr the influence of fluct,.iatlon E and its rellation to A and the Card c5/b A survey of work or, the ,-ra4.1~,nx d6/dh; vith this forzula theory discrepancy concerns basi- cai Ily the va-ue of a. d, more,~vt~r, can be expressed simply as v,ni',re C i 11!~tancc bt-tivpcrl ~r-uiszitter and ratios of 1, de/dh Lnd others to '2cr r.nole e7en nvm'~ ere m. :.- 2 this accords we'! with u general kor-mala and is Integrated with form.ula 2 to M'. A D- AM dvpends on m. If b h n .then D-m+3-2r, replacee D-M+3 ri-can bp substituted by nearezt even whole number, in cases of ciose approximation. Current theories give rei~ul-ta approximate to r. -. 'A ;; /A 2~160 C) i, /CO6/OC6/001/016 A survey of work on the D20,1/D3C;3 -1 zq~ 2. !"nal'~' mentloned are; a) incoherent scaLter and turbulency layers, and ~ cc-h- enz reflecting layers, On a) It Is pointed out t,.at th,: u--,e of Iropoopheric layers for wave reflection has been t:cten5i-ely 3tudied ana that in '1955 V~N- '71r"t-Viv (Ref. 107: Ra- diotek-hnika, 1956, 11, 5, 3) obtained a calcialatea formula which ac-.o!'ded with experimental obeervation3. On b) it is noted that zt5'nle layer reflection has met with two objectionst The fir~:t the incompatabili-ty of the existence of Creat changeabili- t,-f p-0-1.,~rns over long diatancea-with the idc-a of stable troposphe- ri~7 I;-,yersj the second, is, however, iheare-tical and hardly affects ht: practical aspect of the problem; the ex stence of layers has *ne-n fl-rmly established and it is positive that a diffraction apprca~~-h to the problem of spread along zhe earth's curvature will be of value. A simplification of reported formulae was attempted and P r fi~ (A~ [a-ICY h h~') exp aDj, P dh it Card 7/8 ~0" 3 /1 or)'-16 1 l'ooo~?62; 1() 0 1/016 A survey of ii-~rk rr, the ... ~20-1/I)303 obtaln-3d. where (b is a compiicnted function, analoroug to the hi&h factori of :Ivq_z!ca% diffraction theory, contalnir.C. frequency T'e:-,pOI-,S~'0 F--nd , -;ip~ razir:., tdk/dhl,, a - unother fiinc%lon of type A 13 'n A ro~la-:,a to parameters, whose size A and B dnes not de- Scriptive of the fluc- :I A~ Though rict strictly a-~curataly de r-aarion charactt,:- of -lie field the equation gives the nece;sary exporimental ratilo P.,.(D). There ire � and 11? -eferences: 24 Swiet-bloc and 97 non-Joviet-bloc. Tho? four moot recent refer- r,~:es to the Englioli -language publicati-in3 rc~id ae follovis: Radio ransmission by _,onospherie: and tropospher-'.c s~atterr, Proc. I.R.E., 1960, 48, 1, 30; E.D, Denman, Proci I.R.E., 1960le 48, 1, 112~, I.H. Vogeinan, I.L. Ryerson, M.H. Bickelhatipt, Proc. I~R.E., 1959, 47, 5. 688, L.A. Ames, E.T. Martin, E.J. Rogers, Proc~ I.R.E., 1959, 47, 51 769. SUBMITTED: July 27, 1960 Card 8/8 :~F V., redi. f lcip USUDV; ew Lh Oll St : -' ' tes, sate ~;,A va R 11 . - (~~ I ,,~ ARMAND N.A.; VVFDM,-tSKIY, B.A.; GUSYATRISKIY , I.A. ; IGOSHEV, I.P.; KAZAKOV, L.Ya.; KALIN.Y, A.I.; KOLOSOV, LEVSHIN, I.P.; LOMAKIN, A.N.; NAZP-q0VA, L.G.; N1NlR-:)VSKIY, A.S.; PROSR;., A.V.j RYSKDI, E.Ya.; -4qKqWV, A.V.,- TkRAWV, V.A.; TRASHKOV, P.S.; TIKHOVIROV, Yu.A.,-. TROIT~KIY, V.N.t FEDOROVA, L.V.; CHERNYY, F.B.; SHABELINIKOV~ A.V.; SHIREi, R.A.; SHIFRIN, Ta.S.; SHUR, A.A.; YAKOVLEEV, 0.1.; ARENBERG, N.Ta., red. [Long-distance tropospheric pri;pagation of ultrashort radio waves] Dallnee troposfernoe rasprostranenie ulltrakorotkikh radiovoln. Moskva2 Sovetskoe radio, 1965. 4-14 P. (MIRA 18:9) 001-1 T-0 A "-j O*A So 008 of 00 00.4 00 ~z 't, 4 r 1 9 a ti it it 4 0 111 it If to a is. is w a di A) a f a . I I I .-M F. a i I 1 11 #11 IT .1. 1 a A S-, -WD f1roll"lls mot. S 0. 6 L A_MKTALLUftCAL UNRATUSE CLASWCATIGIM l"m 11VIDUVA '60 z- 100 goo fte Noe ago 1440 Fog 1% 1 we 0 40O NOW see goo I 390a *"toy %#&Goo "it any Gas m3a 111 am Ofty isl 9 In' Vllg",ARI %NOW 0 1 IN w e a a 3 1 v u AV so S it a a K K 0 0 0 0 0 0 * 0 * go : : : 0 0 o 0 0 0 a 0o e 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 al 90 0 0 0 0 41 0 IFLAL F -i -go S-4 Ei A s A 11 12 it 14 1$ :4 11 $4 )f A D J4 h is Pf v P L: 1) $4 11 '0 Lf m A_ A _.~A -90 -00 -00 00 06 -00 'fl' filiffs IS. S. R,) No. 102, 3-441( 1 F f Sil - 111VI'll 0 it mion 'MI 114%V4 P161w.1% ill tile fij;ht , l " i ,I tile 410WIF fititto (cm1wr ingr- 00 --.00 I At 1 .11 t'Pt,h At I t I 144 T LIN# I AWO or W. " W3 at O, 1, or 6c it vi 51 rf Ts tt if m 'Kw n A ht L S I N 3 W 0 0 0 0 * * 0 4 0 * 0 0 0 is a 0 9 4 9 0 0 0 & 0 0 o 0 00 0 0 0 0 * 0 0 W w a 111, 9 as a w 0 0 a a 0-0 a afgh & mi A -0 Ge 0 0 W 9 0 11116, C-1111 .4 I a ? I V it u If u is a If W It III III V a J~ A A L--& L F- S, D I L L V...7 I V I T 0o 4 The balim"N"a sin iiii fair maddft of ibeft to ommin A., tilov. so 111W. ftp&, Sa. FOOMMS OW laroctofun, 6Z of t red. j?d lNk". C"P. Sda ma I 23-M, -From fin FrVach) ix a with cere 96 h b 00 . . a %. emp . p " -nd buckwheat on inwhicificom. 09 plete feltilimet" are C*ln red It Putfare and Cl. it is i 4 iW d I St ""Whille a that C In frift r en morr harenful on Infilstili Is 0 than tip chemairms; on the kirtner more Cl is ahmithetil eel Isy the plants. The cause Is twi lower fu drvtkrwd lt~ hlorides am is timi lw s a ff ti l I 00 c n e ec ns a ve retnet . ay n y. ' general, potato" mul fiber plants Vow M on light soils are inmom adversely affected by C1 than when irmwing a,m :: -moact "fls. Nineteen refcrenm~. C. J. S. of t;jE.1IV4r CLAWPICATICh A I., It A flALLUPGOCAt t .. -1 Nllljl~V -A.- 4-3 r 11~- n, W P tilt DOOK Kit It It n It 00 000 :-so .99 a Is 90 109 .00 .00 ago =00 z00 00 0 0 '00 woo An a I me li as a 3 a A 0 9 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 10 If 12 JJ Jd Al If U a At 0 41 Q If *1 411 X 40 t-_-)_t- A. 4. 11 9 A . - C.91!1 A 10 so a a U 00 ;Ji 0 0 0 0 1$ 11 is ts w k$ 14 1P a 'o A 41 a 34 it V I I a L -A. X. f TO. I "C-1st .01testif A.0 01900(91,11 ..013 a It U 34,5369 Jima a# 49 Aj 41 41 A- top ..0 Uss, of A. V. Sok.AQv, Afiwrdi- VdO- 3 9olaso". j"03' I No. 3 49 it is cooduded that Pot-ote and spts, WHICI + XCI) Is not an optimum form of a N-K fertil- tr. bwwme of the excessive Cii pbysiol. acidity and do- Cak4cation of WAIN. its use is isafted to the cultivation t o(tacessive Cl. of plants not sensitive to the harmful tffcc such as wed mid nVeadow grass". edible tubt" &ad some -is, Particulmly re- vrgctablcs. In sawly wool Po"A am form of sponsive to X and K, pow-tc is not a desirable fertiffser. In cases where excess*- Cl and acidity oi ot injurious. there is frequently no need for Potaxote are a th~ introduction of K and. therefore, NIf.C1 can be used instead. Chas. BIaDC 1MV, It al n A ALITALLURCOCAL LITERATWE CLASUPICATICH too., f#2440 L. 4.1, Jor a 4 Kama KUM UK 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 -30-0 bo-snv ow 00V M ='A AA L 1 8 W 0 M a 'I W 10 2 A n a 3 a a 010 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 Ole 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 0 0 0 lee -00 lee as* :00 coo coo see too too 0 -w w- -ew- I I I I t it if IIIIHISIS )?* Ito J) N a x jo )v m MAI Jos xympoij OM Waco M-10 - A I. A- #AL_ oo 1.0 ..a it. OS #I 4 POICCISICA A* Pl"INMV *091 ftvwwiiw_i~~' -A. V. Sokolov and' V. V. Volkovs. Trans. Sci. lost. -Pffro(wt-rillead. eel fulitiddes (U. S. S. R.) No. 126, 5-11(1935).-Nitro- and Amnxvbm were al In their effectivencts as fertilizers. On cbermosem an excess of P over N gave tietter results; an the groy earths an euvas of N over P a 06 A give the bma mm*&; Suit podactic soils eqml quantities of Old P pilve the boK r"Wb. ftpulumph; ift 111*9- l - 00 0 md A mmobw In gemOffim IWJ. I 1 T5--SZ adim. of either .1 thir t. ftffiwm in pot expb fave tbe am results. Increased quamtkin of C= bruaduced differvillm, naludy, the Amuiopbos pvc a hi4ber yidd of stmw with oats. A Ib.W. IrIS._ acid fertilizer and KCI). a neutral fertilizer ((NH 9S0., Tboww slat and KCO and an alk. fertUiser (N&NOi. Thommas Am and KCI) am with saw. crall batchas of Nkrupbo" and a udst. of N"Ov. (NH&)JIP04 amd KCI whkb approaches the compo. of -00 .06 see =00 oo go* 900 0 0 Z 00 9 Owil; Nitropbasks. Tbg mist. proved to be just w am i t as the orillimal Nitrophioaka in pot cxpu. with oats. On chernomm the Nitmplivisha wu superior to the Thomas -lmqtms the sourm of P. On the po(tzols the slag waS juit as Cood. A emparimma of Ow biple cowesballatl ford- lima with m alwavalem Obtwe 41 ocdlm~ly twdlizm ands vadammi commlidess of smil maisfure. Ibid. 19-22- Under cauditioss of pot eirou. there wells so differeum betweem the mood. and ordinary fertilizers it the "I VMS zoo 0 kept at timum moisture. With a paucity of Moisture the fertilimm Were superivw. J. S. Joffe 04 i~' CLASSIFKATIONI A&.-IL- WALLURGINCAL .11 IN. "t t .]till as a", Lit q-T-'--_T-t 1- ~r-. -'-, -a. a I V I OF 1111 9 a AV to Iv to K It x Q R It it It K Re 0 0 0 6 0.0 9 0 : ~4 0 a 9 0 0 a 0 a 0 o o et a 0 0 as : 0 '08 0 0 0 0 Oj* 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 : : : : : " '10s : : : : 9 0 6 0 0 0 00#00 **see 9 090*0 0 I I I I* it 11 13 4 Is 16 it it m a ZI V n m b 11 22 1 1& 1 J* X )o 0 &1 4: U A ax--e- .1 .4 V I T Z LA 1,-44 IS Cr w a 90 The tafluouce of mumalum sWat* lmd acKaum altrat, the activity of rock-pb*GpMto floW. _A 0 . ...V.. Suko(QV. 1'rami, Sri. Ail. Firldiurl IN ferl"fungicUo'l (ty. S. S. It.) 0 No. 126. 1-4-43OW-MI-In fiellf clPts. addav. of (Nil,),- SO, and rwk pho~phstr %howmi no incm%e in yielli 0l j%mls "ti Way (tw"t "I. The nitrate with the phnKptt*te wsq woo even twtter than th* Outy whrtt nr~tx %)( thr (N)l.)*S(J4 and rock ph,mphate nsixt., .etc ula.le lit, lx,t =00 expft.) ws% them an incirmw in "Ity. Wlicntheywere 409 40 fni%~l with the "I nodifferen- ltcd: coo zoo are* 00 $1 Ji u*01 tltf*&Vflllf CL A a** i -; ~40'940 9 A 13 3 a". b u is Aw -0 go *a 000 00000 O-g I I I t N if I) 1) 14 Is 16 it M It 11 a a 14 M 17 11 U 13 It is 14 v x it a 41 4j 11 are 1-1 - I- , " I, t I Ij 0 L j 4 -a- j IL L a. X f -4 A I T V T -X" Wo M it 0 0 '06 0 r Dealsdag tw harm" agam of M Ong" of A 00 A. V. 4p9& go* T neq W"- U.~ J. CAM. Ind. (Mowww) is. KI lesa in tivity of plants to the barow wtico of - C, is =00 000~ biwk earth ajW day dam in weft ad. Adda. of the roe fertijisers to ow wil in aubmus ratber than is Wring 00 docremies the w2Wdv1%;.~ CS-C-tg- nib, them cfkcb tiones 0.1 are more obvious. simultaneous add,,. -1 zoo (NlWvSO4 also de-ess" the secWtivity. H. M. L. 00 -r! 6921 00 00 see .00 -00 A I L EIALLLPCKAL LITERAftNE CLA$SIFICATICh t: S a Ow 0 1 w 84 5 ill '1 3 1 T TS &V ~2 I% it It M K it A 0 If 0 n 1u 0 IS 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 0 0 40 0 a 0 0 0 a 0 Ill 0 0 0 e 0 0 o 0 0 0 0' 0 0060 0 go 0 a go q * 0 00 0 * 0 fe 0 It! 041 * 0 0 *so 000 0 6 so 00 W -,W w- Conjoex nitro -pboafhorus and tylple fertlWofe Ion - Id I ki h l1 f k (C Of A: i- m I ton o or -) ols)v. ' rms o So A t ' ' .00 N6 In. fe 11`7/hur. 1, No. 4 ,, 1W 1937 'f. C. A. 30, 64951-A grnmal millulmy of 11tv -00 N-Pand tile ttiple-ittrugth fmaimi. 'rbcJ1llll%01liAtCd 'uperphusphates ate of no special value in thcm-k-lves owing 1118 lo-.N %ontent, but are invaluable components of mixed f"tiliscri. In weakly ammoniated supctphoiphates (2-3~7g ~;,,,Imhtpm " twt l"..: th.41t Itt 1,1, Nt.111 t 1-1,z -1i" Whill, 11, 11ot], mt 01,111n/~ m kk'~ W 11, IS P S S L -fl~LLUFFIC*k. LJTfNAtLME LASSIFICATICN 1z t 14M)i ~Z' too U K A, 10-It 140 Of K Lt R a It "I ~11 n 1 1! jw 0 0 41 sit 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 : 0 00 0 0 00 04 0 0 0. 0 0 1 f A I IF A 0 v a M IF a At At x . A a it 32 n U A - - w I A v .. jl~ it I it-AND 086CILUS AkD 0 *.4 0 t j lavesdPdana ol avubcauss ddeffids with k%ftmt al SOMMaM CMWW* : a chisti4e). SokWay- NAAW " widt PUSOM 1937, No. 2; d sat-khow Sbo-;k SWA [ 0 a 1. 104(IWS).-NH.Cl i.- 004 the sad by Sbawbing IL nwt than don (NHo)o- I, podxd (koched-out wils) action of chlorides of 001 i while they am wt isfaim k smaller than that Of MdAtt"- 00t of the wil. A cam- it the sudAIM by- to. (N HANS% 0 ( SO NH ) d o . . . 1 an ( twative study of the action of NH4C Sawml that these I"jUi_s sic altailar in their actiom. Th. f"W1100a; addn, of MCI UMCQUICS its luArmful'a- flUC70LC Cc " MAIN. N added to clay "Is in autumn 0 0 a givc.~ good r-Its, while added to light -its it is ""'y 04 wasbcd away. potagot does not give optimum rtsults. M Its Lva use 6 found in soib Producing ctrerls, bftU. feed. 00 gtxKh N and K. s-for plants requirin t ure on pas W. R. Henn 0 0 Jr 41 A I L A, PETALLURGICAL LITSMATIAt CLASSIFICA7100 ICIO.. $I Aid. b"LM. It a.. Q*t ---1-;31131owt1 . ...... a 9 a IN a At a 0 as a ~P .00 -09 -00 -00 .00 800 30* 400 000 Ire* see Argo 4040 600 S90 W041 ISO& U11 AV 10, It 0 0 It It ; a, A, "I ell It YL 4, V, INK All I t 8 ad 0 a 9 1 ff a9 a a 3 0 v 010;090009006 SO 00000*000000000*90 0 0 010 0 0 0 0 0 * 0 0 P 0 0 0 a 0 0 0 0 0 0 * 0 0 0 0 0 0 900 _s~ --aW % T 0 a 0 0-0 4- 9-4-41 0 0, o 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 411 0 0 0 lluljktli6 lite is a It 12 a Xx A A- L-AL-S-1-6-A-1 -10 CC W.-M jLA-i--L-1 -1 -A-I-A. 00 00.( 00 We of fed SO 11110 YW4 61 vm& md kay of ' l of 1'. oglmiiies. A. V t.1L % - D'YukurA SM K. A Dn""i". I a4;~&"ak Ali. (11 8 S It i 0 . , . . . S, 57-70(lWn--j%t MW fidd ripts. with kffu"Wj - %how th t U W t off a n it. a I mg. of 8 pa Ill. of Kil increll,44 X00 the Yield Of mOd gild 1114Y. Hnmcially favorable were -, e0a effects of B an podmi soila whkh received large quantitt of lime. 1. S. jcffe too 00 00 0 6 2 too 0 09 2 A 400 11. see Soo 1100 -00 nee A 5 0 S L A &tYALLLiRGKAL LITIMAIUMt CLAWFICATION WS , m~ t- I'.. -- -, ~ Nee --FwTz- I - Is. 1.1c.. ." U.C 811111 MK aft, Lit V, I I I a P all L S I Od 0 -1 a I W 0 0 a a It to Cir al a if IIIW K K 0 3 2 1 ie 0 0 p 4 e 0Z 0 0 0 4 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 a 000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 : 0 00 0 0 o 1 : A 000060.0 0 0000000040000000* 000400000000000 1 0 0 o a ip a 0 0 0 a -a- 0 1 41 -41-- 41_4_*_fv lost$ is swillull"ll is it 4 U 14 is 'A it is it a it a &I ill at) r Q I A-L I _111 it. 'Aft,4*1 00 00 The use of chlorides mis fortilizerst. L -IkAuAm- Sci I I t'. if 1.1 -00 r "C" a 410, A4. 11 a Irrillirro 1"'4wasillif 0 Owns mWill.; so a M tiv vt rational in neuttral swili, but it iA not suitable in -00 acid Ifommianie If% chief dra-hick ii its high CI "'WVvit. The scnsiti%vn"~ ~4 plant, So CI (11,1WUL4 mt -00 a~ 1-11 44 Wj OW WAI'li,113 A ,.1 111,111 4,11111itr 000 .4 1 fl. It i,t higher its .. W 4.1.1 m 11 .1, 4 11-m ill millial And .14y"y (Its Ill 114 4 I 1"11;4110"l11 Ila% brell otj_fvr'I in the wn,itivrite,4.4 pbijt~ 1'~ Cl mid to Ca. coo 990j 00 goo 0 "Oe J :46 0 A I a - k A *1TALtbkrKAl, LiTril,ift,iff CLOWICATION a Z_ too 10 8~ r ' , .0_ ......... -1-11- - ~ . - __ I - jd~~ -00 U 'm 'v ili; 4-T i i '1 1-1-1 'a-3 - V-17T-Arl -t -v-v -04- 3 0 00 00 0 n It as 411 Kit pr4w,; atir ita mw n i 'va 0 1 1i sal, 0 0000 00 00 9 000000000000 0000 i~o":Ooo:!Oooooooooeooe::::::iooeoosooooooooooooooo~~ 0 a 0 0 0 0 * 4 0 a 0 40 I I )Ali I f #1111101ISS11161ple it a ita W:x n v 13 )1 a is x is As it a &I m AS Joe A &__4" A--" _L__A It -A, I . . 2 6 _-L _0 0 4 00 41 A ..a TOO Teaft an the we d emmWeed dbqpa &W VAA �~P- wiser is an twu a Ak"m I" Sokalmv~'rraw. Ski, -wt. Feftiiliws liasadofm I ~U. S. S. R.) No. 136, 14-46(196r,); Chiallif & wasopit 40, W.-Chloritles (NII.Cl) have littk indiarwe an ON 7 1,&I)ry houvesto; In a pozzuOlarlic UAI their ClIccl is ven tuore favorable than that of sulfal". though it re- m2ins inferior to that of urrm and K,111104. In the .~asc of clayrv fort-c ,kxL*. txAh chlovid- atut milfat" act Inthe~-1116%-S. tion o( d&%, uv (A %ffskl arte, K,41. 6-tic[ t-ult. th:u) MIAl lone, Pot walori NII.CI ha- an ;i,lvctw z0 o at milucri"r oll Ixth Imm"t *1,1 and starch ctintent. Ale 0 A. Papinran-Couturr moo o: 7so* go M 00 4r 9Sao 0 zoo If me 0 3*0 7, moo =00 I S L .1 TALLLI*GK-L LITIMATDOE CL-%lWKA7lC- -0~1 A, Ll! _s r le, it OftlTSM11140t 9 K it IT 11 IN Z. .0 1 do, 0 :if 0 0 O'o 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 0 0 b 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ~o V W OF W 0 W 0 Of 0 0 9 0 0 o * 0 a 0 * : #'o 0 0 0 0 * 0 0 6 0 6 0 o 0 0 0 C ll ' 1~ is I- M , P 12 .1 " .3 '. p " '~ 1, J, -3 N k I, q '15 1 v T T L AA 00 M Et - A k;tlccts of chloridee an buckwheat and sunflower. A. go _ ;~jkuju%,~jnj. 5ci. Isis. Ferliliur; 1*3eclafamirs- -00 00 A 1'. S. S. R.) No. 136, 47-M(lqa7): Ckiiiitie NS.A.-Exc-.m of chlorides affecti buckwheat. Industrie 40 -416 . harv-t~ but has little inductim on sunflower. The Xr -0 milm-m-f hbmid" i,ni-rpr ... i-imed in fm"- t is md thmi tit madihi. f.,,c,t u,04. Applira. acculwilat I'm tit Cl in bwk- 11 ... I .-I hai lt,4 lea'kh" all go V, xv ally in t C Str 1% ; t wrC 1~ A ~imullaneouq , a. bra t ; , K and Nlg toments. The hAtinful increaw- in the Ca 06 j , intluence of chlorides oil buckwheat is greater when used =9 0 00 its conjunction with N114 than with nitrate. A. P.-C. 00 d= 00 0v 00 r ! -- 00 00 Y* 0 0 -.00 A S 5 L A WALL~IGICAL LJTER.T~Vt CLISSIFICATIC. T too is 50 0 I I '" .1 1 1 . fw 11 1 W 2. ;o ! ; , , " '4 N it (I et 11 rq 14, n I - 0 0 a 0 0 0 0 e 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 41 a a 0 0 0 * * 4 0 * 0 0 V A, 0 o a 0000000 09olltelt, 0 0 o 0!" 1M - 0 is A 'n is 31 u a ida is jj Is U 13 M U $6 a a is I fl f UM4 u d h n o"Ce o C 00 as l x an emp 44 a twoctilla 4w Flaos. Sri. 149. Ffitaimps lowtofootig idol (1". 14, S. It.) IJO N &"1 1 37 Chi & :10 j o. atio injustrif 40. 991.- 9 . ( ); Ifeultr certain conditiow, chanxinig the thtir,4 applicatiors Ole of N and Cl fertilizers; call im Irmbly the effects b b d f 1 B = = o la ir ront 1 0"". y fu 1 Yeaffy (-NP doy% before %owind) applicatiuk Cd Cl feltilizerl, a favorable remilt iq obtained, due coot fially to the elitninatioss of CI by Intiviation. lithe trot iscorried out under usch couditions that liviviation does " lake ptore, mr[T agn,licotitts of Cifrlilf"reldh mladvaujass-. ' f M 00 -,. is pt- isr Iscruntillosidft 4A 11.0-4, t .0 It, Ih- -,it its% &,,k1 1%ustio4onle ft-0, brinjo wild dot all, -n.h1we W so I chloildt's, the fixiner nKwe than the Ltttri. Ily liming the harinfid action of chlorides on hemp cats be stipprmwd, but it Is much telist effective in the caw of t1ax. of zi A. Popineatt-Cotaurr a to 44 it 6) is w,6 A. 4 .641 *Sm-SLA b(TALLUMOCIA. 1.111111TUO' CLASSWIC.T10- it 0 43 a 5 6 V AA I I a Od a I so so No A 1 1, P r, 1, n 14 st K tt alt a 0 0 0 '0 0 & 0 0 00 06 0 00 0 0 * 0 O'o '0 0 0 0 0 9 000 9604 400 =00 .300 cog 00 2 wee zoo see zoo tlee 400 boo a -t a -t -~-A-fp a 6 -Q a A 0 % a Is a w-'w 1 a -'Mvff-'w -IW'W 9 9 0 W a a C a a V 17 W t' W 9 0 a 0 0 0 0 OP 0 0 0 00 0 0 9 -0-00-4 -4vlw-- 1 00 0 0 000000 0 Is Is.0 H 12 Ill . 0 1, 0 A A-1- J-j -4. ~j v, JTJA Al 44 :' 00 -0 of -AO 00 fits"t WEIP"i-Oll with Pollillote. A. V. Solwlv. -00 /S asu.. .00 00 r/ ans. Ski. 1100- f9flaiwS Inifflefungkides (U. S %. ;o IM. 62-75(19M; Kkim. Referar. Zkor. 1. No. 4-5. -00 2 00 A'(*,Wg); d. C. A. So. 4601)1.-The harmful effect of 00 the Cl it, P04"Ote (KC1 + NIMI) can be vernowd by cb&nV-ng the N:9,0 ratio, and h 00 a y the pro~w choice of --la 0 OtT Ph"'PlIffitt base- hPts. wM Peffofnwd with quitch -4,00 Krass. oats, miUct, mustard, Us, buckwheat and hemp 00 1 an different sailt. Fkx, buckwheat. and hemp mete mt .00 ii- sensitive to the cbkwi&s. A decrease of K to N: KgO '00 1: 1 Save =lY a 40% e&--. wkik- so effect was noticed 00 for the others. Tbecbiu.,,~o:oINH4CIinP*Iazotetootbrr '00 00 j forms of N (Nlf6NO# and NH.SOj was mom Effective. 400 00 a An adda. of basic phosph-.es corrects the effect ot NILCI .-d of Potazote. w R Ffmn '00 06 1* 0 00 4100 90 00 1101191 be '00 "00 MAILP19 CLAHVICATMON a . S L A METALLURGICAL LITE ki: 0 14no j S4304a a-- aft M111310-C 411LIll aw a.. III U 5 AV 00 IS Ia' p.F a It it t it .4 ~Ul a 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0000 0 000 000 . ~O 0 1. 0 0000 IS 00 0 0 0 0 0 io z 0 a 0 0 0 08 a 6 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 AN Is 0 0 0 0 IS 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 a At a a a 0 file 0 o a. m te 16 17 See m ___A_j _r_Q [a 0 0 0 0 -0- 0 r O~PP~_' ~W I v n id 23 21 v a itm 14 1? Is 40 -1 4: 41 id 411-ce IF I __LU T Z AA d j_to_JL_A_AL_ - - - - ~.Z. as -00 Role 01 ujillam distribultion of sulteritive elesturste 'c 90 a 016 00 in the "a Im" the refts"al of the davirlopervical ON X's. 14's. N... 1J6 1.4;., Chimir & injustrw 40, r%Kq.- -- Flic %tnfavc of %!,c v)A vilikh can be olifirtit Im plant, llvlwtid, it-it ,Il[Y at 41411' )%)Wrf 10 IIVVCIAIII lilfit' 1-t,l 1A.C1.1tv. hilt all) Os Ar 9 00 00 ; t ,it lit;Aboring plane.. It aN I"Ittiu. I-elly wjt-~. that applicallti j Or f'.1111il't. 4t a .1i,it'sixv Of Al Cut. fillul lite 111ASItS ilKIIAIVII lite vieftf; but what the plant *A4 _Wlkl. front the fertilizer by ~,thvv plants it mtIll no longer make u%c of lite rtailizing dousents. Owing to the it-regular tibiributiou of Icrtilij. ing clements let the .41. utiliz4flou !fice cleme-rit- by .1rightKerbig 1)1411t% 1-4 very littellisal. P.-C. e o 00 00 2 111049 00 cee W- 200 see ASO.ILA .1TALLUJIGICAL Ull[IIALTUARIF CLAS$WK;T;CP Celle 0 ISO--- 91.14#11- 1 View JeCit'ji). wee .&I del 0 All 00 91 4"i, 4, It 1101041104 Nit 940 were n it a Men a I I" :::::Iooooooooeotooqpo*oo010000:0000000000*0 j00009099909011111 960099090996099011 0: : 0 0 0 0 0 o 0 o 0 0 0 0 is 4 0 0 0 a 0 o W ago 0*00000000*0,0000001 0 0 0 : 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 0 o 0 o 0 0 CO M 31 32 13 31 15 k M It 19 4( -1 a) 11 IT (> A, SS t$ 4 10 0 0:: Of of oo_- Os 00-- go 002 00 00 002 1 00 Q 41= -~1U.1m.113.1AIIIJIflu j0 -Ituu I'll Cull tivill jualls 3 00 - 'Jop.%.1p Imll it) tINITI(IIJI'ti) alp flu I.XIM111111 %,.,I ~rll sp% I sk- , Iuwpp -141 r 113.1111(maini'loul alij. C, 00 aill all plir. la4yall ~tjl 111 111-1 ItI.Iflitlop-)j) JI1111 JO -~IJNINJ up it! "Arl'ttil it, jew ~vr-ll I.- p 00 00 Ipiq,% imp-I mp joltim'J.: ].,m. In 00 so .9ti .,.% !'N' v sjurld 10 plo,!-A I'M, 111-1tif oo.- -dopmaj. Imi Uff pos ,41 111 slaA;bl IU.)Jap!p IV aillis!0", pup %itmai4la aA111jints III, utIjInq!j3%!p 341 10 V-1,U.4 Or 0 0'~ ' 4 11 21 ~4 YV 7 1 Vi'A A I t 9 Fj A 61 9 1 7 T-1 1 1 0 a in a .1 If If Ix 4: a It ft c c a alett'l fill it It 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 01 * ~*. 010 0 0 0 0 0o 0 0 6 0 0 0 9 0 0 0 9 0 - 4 -e' Ak * t. -IL. - - 0 W * -* ~ -0 t' I N 10 if it it n ~J44 ).Wolv ~J- Ill, m a ii 0 A a f I l it i A l If li, Boca compounds used so lertilictirVi A 14,4-ir 1, .0 /1"T oldl~ Ill. 1, R. S. ('k; .-A"V 034 N., 1 ~-41; V, SSS 17 -- It I%jI W.I. I., W-d- "'. I n . ; 0 1 W .... . I cir- K "itim. lmlllltv~ t,tv"flic le'i ,I III ! N1111111ri dritti-t-, loki~,Itl,l III liml Ilwl'i -fr. Ill-ad wul uJ11% lallef -I title) qpmhl I~ c-11IM-1m.1 -It, it '-jig h,llhlvl,~ the ITIAX. VfltNt If It I"tIIll"%W1t%4J~T%C1I Ili -IkICttI'fMl%, h-gluninou'l. cht-voltiAiitcroul and plani,; lite illill. fit the graujinmu- plint- -wmn It. Ali itlctvlt~ of the -1 yield vA 6-gimim ni~ pknt~ wis '_%rd (-it .1w:1 lim.- ,- 1. 'Ottfli't with It. dt% - mt .,( I,- -(,.I ~1-- in Ix-vt" In 1we"Illmll"I liv It l'itilli'l ki'm - ill)k. jetwil of It Irtidim IV., on ...'! I- - d. I I, It a[ ill ('2CO. it'. riijil'. With Whi, of, vvi;rtabl, " liciv Illitim, And -jilial-'al plaw, It ill ill, jwt~ of 1.4# ilix Iw-v lit. .4 wil Owt.1d 1. , ai,ul. rid 4, ;1 tv,im.il. - J 4 oh k -o ~fl% - % Ad ill 41.;1 Ing, I"I if .." Iw l"Ill. g noliccuble d,,-rrAe of lite Yield, b(st l.1 r.;K. .1 11 1~ t;,,t %UITAMA. Any watvr-1. It cuttilA vin Iw ii,td 4; It G-t t Ili z c t -Expd. djtA kt, wl"ItAted. T.,lit-tilt" teft,lem.- A A L .11ALLOGICAL LITINATLAt CLASSIFiC-TIC- 13.0. __ _ --- -f- .0 u v, 5; E p p IF a An L S a Ow Ir 111 13 1 A LT IV IP M K d R 91 PC It it it m 0 0 0 0 r of 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 a 0.0 0 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 0 0 a a 0 4 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 4 a a I I * N. it 11 1) 1. it 14 1? is 11 11 :1 D 11 25 1. ;7 13 19 x 1 1: " " D I. v m " I, " .' I I '; I L 1-1 1, a- 1. _J_ _ L III I- ? I V I -__A Y. L ~A If CC PP tj~t W I I I ~- ;.. . _ o 0 00 0 0 A riiSO&TCh on the jeterMination of the AUO- -00 fluluic Ish" of he phnsphates of the slaq-10xi-1041 -00 1,124 "1' -00 0a J 11-C 1,11, _00 Illat ..1 -1 Ca "'A't 11".11 _ es .41, 1.11.4 A'141 1, 0- . i ~ :: "Illill.t"I Illat, ll,v I".111tol "I 0 : .4 A-m.141O."T 0 111,, -'Julcm, Nl G. %I-- :roe zo 0 0 0 ~~o 0 ~00 00 1 we 0 00 ~00 00 Soo 00 0 0 00 : I 09 f. . - 00 IV I%' 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 ZA 61 N J -1 Cl 0 0 0 0 o 0 o 10 a o 0 o 0 0 0 0 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 : 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 0 0 0 0 0 6 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 W- PI 0 4 4 41i 0 fl I 10 OJJO 0 -* -0--s -S-4 q " it P j 1~ fi if A j4 0 Ai hl A, It A I A L A M f 4 A I f f I I AS Off V- %, F.1 b 4 A f 00 -00 0 -00 Methods (,,r the investigation of phosphorus leftiliarrm 410 A N' *-Wh- I r wl, A I I I I . , N,,. 141, 96,M110; Ahm Reft,af. Zhur. 2, No. L!, -Thc compar.stiv, e&ctivencm of the ['106 unit in fcrtilizer5 cannot 1w curi- ntcted directly with the crop increa-,v obtain"l. A no. of ,uggestiorv, are given fur the plannin4 of expl%. in whidi zoo the different forms of Pfvit;- --cirsart, rimiparril 'I c 00 11--nii coo 410 A S b S L A 'It A L L LA~K AL L I I I RAT Lfff A SSIFICOICh I Z-, Z:00 10, l n If r V- Tyl a Od IT 14 1 1 1 A St (I it it .v Ai x tc of u rt tt it n rv to n I 'I. 0 0 0 0 a 0 0 0 & 0 0 a 0 : : : :! * 0 0 es 00 0 * 0 0 0 00 : 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 goo 0 0000 0 0 0 0 a 0 411 0 0 0 e a 0 0 0 0 0 -4 IV w # If 1A I/ If 11 . I P if A I I I I I AA 0 C4 M tt 0 If 4 Ajo 0 The effect of iron and aluminum an th'e q-Llity of Am 00 00 A `VkLAQ1- I I ()t.,I,n, m.phos. Sand cultures, ' 'i hi' i .00 , V.-Tit r.,Iy l ,, V-~a and N. V. KoOtel Iva. so k4 Na, k,,:- No 141. VS 101, 1113-1i 1. N,- .1, 'If WAtct -L N AIILI 1.01 Nup-I.ih-I -pt, 4--1 Atmuopho~ rc%idues arc lt~% av2dablo: I,, plants thAu thv 00 the Atmimplif),; rviiduvs, contaitt water-in-1. N an,l . i.- -1 N11,11. 0 a ;A 1-~ h-U: .I N k 1. 1, ;.I- for Ow d,t,, ,I [if,- t.O.&I P E:20 W. R- 11f,1111 ago 00 a 4p 66 S 00 t 15, 0 t~ 1w An L a w 0 1 Is 11, 0 a a 3 1 4 *no It et 11 31 it K a K w K IT It If 0 1144 0 0 w V 04 , I I ! I ! . . C '! 0 0 0 q 0 00 0 *0 li 'I '. 's ia f/ so 11 Xx JP J4 11 Is 17 a A Aw P U u it L 4 L I tl A A L A N't .r LO if -00 0 0 ..o * 0 OR -00 00, -00 00 ..00 00 -00 00 1 -00 00 -00 00 jr .00 so Determining the active aluminum in il 00 J , I ~. ~UVIV.. ~*f,,l"u"on Az =41 0 001) 1614, N, . .. 7f; I - Ac,,-,Iitlg f1k t)t" ('..,wnAI- ,.I; * . AM Kl- or Na 1: 1-, 00 3 gi%- '11k. 'kit at Ow of I'll, 11"I I'll: 11.41, 111 COO 00 ~dt hV lit'.6"ll 01'. act's In t'l zoo ~T S I"ll, 00 aoo 00 .00 00 zoo zoo 00 00 j =00 q ::Ole A I I S L A jT&LLLk`G#CAL OTFOOLSE ZLASSIFIC&TIC- C. =90 so =00 jo 0 T - 7T I lr.ZL a -1 cc K 41 IX 11 11 r #1~ 0000000008000040 0* 00;01141000400*06040000000 a ooooooevoooooo*O*OOOOooo.000000410000000000eoj 4- 4- 4 ~r if r 0 4 27 to 11 m 1, W 11 J, -1 AA 00 CC LV tL A A A, I.P "Dist 1 0 "hosPhorus nutrition Of plants. 1. The influence of -0 0 Ful"fers 00 the Accumulation of phosphorus Com d in Plants. A. V. ,.k 'j Y I I'lJnt InAlCti.111 , I,, I w 9., ale v%td. for 5 hrs. with Etifff and thc ph,,~_ 1111.4lid- dt'[d. its tile ~xl. ThrrumdUe tAtrrattil With ILN ) - .d , aw id A i so* e c-l m 3, t le inorg. for-ins. I h,, the I' i~ deld. :M the aAl of the T-idue. This gives. by diflerence, file " P -Awl- in IlCL in this fashion barley, peas and jjjlt w"r investigated under various conditions of 11 supply zoo 3 1 it, ~nd and mixts. of sand and soil cultures. It is , hUwn ' that file accumulation of tile various forms U( 1, de id - 1 s pul Fro"'th Period, 11 %UP 4 at tile Particular " ~1 tile rate of P intake. by ill,- plant, and tile envulmunesual cundiii,nis responsitylt- fur tile growth of file I "lain. b4h- zoo see zq* tW 0 S( S L TALLURGICAL LIUMATURE CLAWFIChTlow, 11104 i. it,, m C' 0 " if 1W 1 13 a 3 U 10 IS 0 0 0 0V K n FI-9 l 0 0 e"0. 00 So-lol'Ov , ;,,. V. "A Method for the Fractional Dotermination of P-contuiniL,.- .- . . in Plant3,11 A. V. Sokolov, Chenl'-tlon 3ocialistic Agr, (USSR), Ic,4cj .1, .1 T210 10, 01) )6Z8, -KhimReferat Zhur, IV, No 4, pp 82 (1941) (SEE: Inst. I Insect/Fungi. in Ya. V. Samoylov) SO: U-237/49, 8 April 1949 - - - - - - - v 11 7W-W-W-,W-Wjw-*- W- I 1 0 x ZI ai A A P N LI I I u w is v Id it II j a & A- L 11 b r R L_ L 4 YA cc w ti 40 water-soluble phosphstes in soils.AV. SkIkalov Ped4ory It'. S. .4. R. 1 1943. No 4 .. 36 401;., Unch'I" 00 10) 1, 1 No -1 1' it, .". ~ '.I "III I.C, w, ' " WA ,I the ""! 11V t kI AV -1 1, mic by .0 'r 1-e0 00 go 00 00 &0 10 0 j.;'O zo so 0 -is 0 0 =00 L*o v0 n U 11 R It 1. A .I 00 001 0 9 0 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 0 0 0 WIZ a v v w v-w--w- ja USSUPANCI; 41 A A r A_ M -1L--1-1-AA -04 CC UP-U4-&--A- 00 rue ta the soU. D. L. r0 W-4 AA,4 d S . . w AskWA81. V. 4 IWI Am. 1'. Kuk.4-Jitro d1ya 11,4rrykk i lAb. 1111,4,W"Il hKAW S. ' " m "C &Irremeamw ACrukkim. A1,1110 Wvkw Of the tuct~'Nls uwd No . 00 - S. Joffe thrittightyat the wiml 4 . ~q 0 00 06 Zoo Z700 .00 L A AETALLURCKAL LITIMAMAI CLASSIFICATION E-z- 00 - IS u a A. a j An fw 0 4 1 w 14 5 Q 0 ~ 3 1 1 p It It M, K K it -1 a IT cr IT if of Wa n t 6 6 0 0 090*000 0 0 0 0 0 0i so 0 f. 0 0 0 0 46 4D 0 0 0 0 0 0 0, 0 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 0 O-W 1111170C --de 0 ~ iT 11114l1 I I I I I I 1 0 v It 11 1 1 A A --- L. It _J__fI Al_x to 11 11 11 11 11a It Rablimblumb I. a A- -I- t A47 -A_L__L_M AN CX 110 Et 1~1 j *04.1 PROCIESSIS ..v plerfallit ..Plo 0,A Influence of feeding conditions u the PlAn TV of Torious ph o hor A. co t ~ n ! 49 6 mpl. "rd. JCS 1 1 M En0i,h): el. CA. 34,2&1101. - IA)w 11 ill file n Off dtw~d dw tilwtin awli Itucle"pr"t'-itt 1, lita It,,( p 11f tut grilatil bat ill lilt- yollilig mAt % . 1.11 V01 14-14 VAtil"I 'Aillf file Will. Of ". 1, "11VIII't 1111fAt" I t ... uttittl Alt t!tc ~I%ttcrkI( N. I h-pItat,, :% file reductum of tattrAtes. fly phu~pluxylm j M-drat- are oxidizol to "r1r. 'A'id. and CO" a so liv It iplit iMfnim I lie c-ArIxilipirat 0 v ; t's utrivitt 1m,plutti4e "Ailig V jIattwtj,at~ iml nd es. I A NITALLURGICAL LITINATL419 CLASINIKAT1001 j- j A- b u S AT No is 0 IT IN III It 0 At a n 4 Is Al a it I f OF 0 0 * 0 0 0 a 0 a 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 a 4 00900000*90*0 90 11 ; -0e; 106 bit vu . ~ bill mu son.. U41.41pe k A 0 A It 9 4 A IL_ L__A 00 content tit 5)(ill w- tit,- -00 I l -00 . I I at, at' -00 carl.j. lutr.1" =00 =00 7 zoo 00 ;100 I-C 0411100060606000606466W.1 IIAll ad All a rwo R 6 1 v memo 39-i-ImIt 0 lo fa 01"; 0 0 0 4111 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 CD 1713 .1 .4. 11 2 3 A.v . AC1,11C.-dUlal 0", iclice, read a rcr?ort a' Lit, Conforence on ulerriF -)f A- vicidturd Che;;dstr,- k. the Ncw Five Year Plan held at the buse Df t e Acriclerav of Sc ".ences :)f t ,~ US.-p.~- on '.lay 17 anj 20, 1~,46, in -i, t1w-, "T ie 0. At"'ricid 11-unll C 10-liFtry in t.,.e :.evi Five-Plan" oo-O Of. ;TN f 4 16 if n N A It :A [A I _L__1 It, 1 11, ;4." me 'C W I lie IIIIIIIAllon of IIIIII kvills by IIIAIIIS 41 A low laoi! lull "O"trill. -tic _I'VI" ic"I l'Unt, x1o"n at ' 111"ioure ~uppfical its (lie jo.'r Layet'). Nutrient,iarr pLiced it, rithlg oI the bvrtA. Samlv LayrrA Z 1~1.rell IhVlo.rf and .1111metiodlim"ut thVIII.161111V litI111,111, .10 111111sell lo, 11tv Lkvvt~ I"t (tic tool" Mtet 1mvilij; twelt go 0: III . t1ir .111mil IV 1111101 lovirl 111.1ri thr fluffirtat, J: (AVit III) fintis IIIP 111m,f I.&Y, I, S Ji,vii-v, thr flit4ifirR ,it '01114, 1 Im-f.'...II I-t' "'.1 -.It Imill. IVA 011.1 p1- fit IT'I't Ihe J- '00 Ats-it A, x(VALLVKGKAL Mfff4TLkF CLAIVIO'k4TION .00 "ti'Nr It it A, $ t9pip"90( Kit Na It t :o ; 0 0 0 is 0 0 4 40999099096401600900460* 9 ZOO 0 0 00 -00 VO Alt) 4. A 411 1 Z~ .3- li~ a .4 00 0 0 of, 009000006000~ SVOLOV, A.V. "The Role of the Plant in the soil doctrine of V. Dokuchayev" Pochvovddeniye, No.6, 1S,46 11 .. -1 !,- I. u ti u 1% 1. it Is 1, $1 j it I AA 08 ~c ~c t IlAtion d Avull'inticAlly filed nitilarn in Ax.., J " It, awn by I'gurm, 1, gi,I Ol'il I,%- j,,~, ,,, 1. 01" ,mm , Io th, I,t i,,,t 0. o I-, I.. -00 0 CA) tc 1,01 11.1, Il A 144 fiTur lot clovec. I'M 01141(A, Ill .00 Lj: -4 N 1'. rvov I'm III uY is A chTv It" "I- I-Int"I Im OW fur rvrrY I. of N fix.1 A) g. if oo -00 0 0 00 roe 00 00 L.5%.F.. TIC. 7::619 00 it T; i b it I IT t( t No 0.0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 9 4 1 L I LI h L a t, 11 Y I I AA it V. iv (E 0 Thirty y~&rs of &Vo-chemistry in Soviet Rusaim. A. V. -A 24 l 1947 617 S S R l 0 - . y- n atia . . Pedo .) Sokolov. ogy I U. , k of the theoric, of Lict.ij; and the advamys itia-le III 00 Rumiaon %oil pmliwthitv iii rri-ition to ininLral fertiliza- tion. J. S. joffe 00 ;1_00 - -:09 0 -0 0 Zoo Ob I zoo tso0 I S L EI ALLLF(,kAL L;TEQ.?t1I?1 CLISSIFIC.-.IC~ =00 00 60 o it I %1 4. 10 LS r 14 if It of sr 11 tr ; 0 L I I n. 0 i0 w m I J1 a 3 0 0 000 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 00 00 0 : Flo 0 Wo go 0000 go 0 0 0 0 0 g: 0 0 0 0 *,o 0 0 0 * 0 000 00 0 0 0 Wo 00 0 goo 00 Go** 0000 oi goo* so 00-0-WW4- 0 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 0 0 it D 24 Is 't 27 J1 20 A; 11 u 1) m 5 k 11 11 0 r, 41 41 44 .1 P. 0 F 5 1 Ij 1A VA Ct W (t S, I -so Soil cover and the geographic effectiveness of fertilizer A. 11,,j,,1,-%. . 1 1947, N- 1. 11; 'BV mv g th, 4m., ,;l Trill I.-lul IVI., .,11.1 it I bnmghtout thm %, ithin t lie millc 1'.11A I Vj, Ill, .11"f1" 00 -J N, P, or K or a cuinhistitimi d ti;-- 1, I~ t;.1, , : so I-A fArti)r~ Within U CCSWU Sel)JET-LI1111C 1~^Itllolj. 111, 00 , Ift-t tivrm- Y-4rics with the avA.Joility ,I tilt. re,,,. I. r. 00 x in t1w 1011A tVj.'. '11111, 111, 8*0 of J, ('411.1in Illure 11 U1111 lt.~N S th,411 ille Of, r1l.q. fee J I-Ii,dized -& have a K jewtv, OLm .,th.j 410 A -litlliL%r 11IIA111b il 111-Ph. -111 lilt OT' I ill' 00 13 ill.knure. 1 1.4, zoo 00 Zoo so =00 00*t goo 00 ZOO =00 i zoo AS.-SLA -(TILLUPOCAL UrCRAT"t CLASSIFOC.TiC. C Z _i _T_ U SS &I "a &S too 0 00000 0 0 0 0 0 111 ofill 9 Goo 00 OL 0 lo 0 o 0 a 0 0 0 *1* 0 0 ig 9 im * 0 0 0 0 0 a 0 0 0 *1* 0 o 0 0 0 0 0 0 goo 0 go o 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 o A 'C7 C~7- A. T. ~ C jy 1) 1 ,P Soils - Analysis Methods of diaanosina nutritive-element deficiency in soils by physical appearance and plant analysis. Ruk.issl.pochv. 5, No. 2, 1947. 9. Monthl List of Russian Accessions, Library of Congruss, June 1952. UNCLASSIFIED. sclwul 07.1" 11 . V . Soils - Analysis Greenhouse methods of soil analysis. Ruk. issl. pochv. 5, No. 2, 1947. 9. Monthly List of Russian Accessions., Library of Congress, June 1952. UNCLAS6IFIED. f0 0 * 0 0 a o o a 0 o o o o -- - oooooooooooooo;oeoooo 0 0 00 09 a * 0 0 *000000~060*06 0 0 0 0 0 0 IS 0 a 0 0 9 0 0 0 0 0 0 1 u III it 32 is I s It 17 A It 40 41 L? a] AS sy cit lit u n tv 7 1 v w _j ' .011INifts"13 31111,814" -it-.Vv "mill jo w, lit!%% A 10 IP9djIKpP -lit qatrint iall,- ion F..p * d 111-11 -1111 'J IIIM 5virld iqi Aphing pispaurv, "D 1011111-1113 A-1111 1-Irtjd,f,qd aqj. -mirviltian, A(I Jailio qt tunil IgIa4 sv-..A Ippim IcKj .'III lit 'Xill"'I.-Ijoijim. * ' " ~ 111 I'll Fill' j I'lit' N NIJSAI,~IIJ .1110 1313111 jtp 'iod aliltiol, y , 00 -ml I),. joxl~ litill "Itu'l C A-I Iiii-xilIv ir pIviI(l,(iqd 1,13111 ,j Itill! laIrqdI;nqdnmu r.) . 00 ..if Ild,.ild pill, -ip -ounttj) q..ijjwIF Itiamy!Ij )o - 00 110.11-1 111 Aja,t% NIQ.I.L - I-Ar lIt 'm q "q 1. I j 41 d i i 00 nos aql u1 salvq sal ISAOIZI 013 1 soqd 10 l u m Ill A A it "I f A 4 If li I p SOKOLOV, A. V. PA 48/45T4 USSR/Agricultur6 Jun 48 Fertilizers Nitrogen "History and Current Situation of. Soil Science: Biological Nitrogen and Mineral Fertilizers," A. V. Sokolov, 6 pp, "Pochvovbdentp" No 6 Brief historical review of present knowledge of biological nitrogen and mineral fertilizers. Compares fextilizing and soil revitalizing activity of clover and timothy to action of .mineral fertilizers-. Presents recomended-methods for application 6f mineral fertilizers. , ,~ft - -- .4Y49T4 USO/Agriculture oat 48 Soil-Science Phosphates *Mcw-6ment of Phosphates In the Soil2" A. V. Sokolov, T. D,. Koritalmya, 5 pp "Pochrovedeniye' No 10 Low temperatures, high humidity,, and incredded culti- vat-ion of fielas decrease phosphate-ion absorption ~y Ooil. Movement of phosphates along with-soil -_ Oolutiona toward roots of plants increases Dhosph&te #take of plants. Wet frequent foim of Mbolved bhosphiate is.mono-calcium phosphate.- 49/49T13 jn~ u -r ui tual,' 11 ituo -~crtl- t,-. min ral or hors ~s. i o n t 1 L i S t o-' -.. u ji c,3s s ions, Librar-, o" "onc-ress, !lLrc!-I 73":d- 0~ -:0: 1 s - 0 c 'CC -2~7 -i T j'-o r I :'~ )i7 2. Ur-,:,-:" (601J) 4. Fertilizers and Ianures 7. D.N. Prianishnikov on the law of increasin.- soil fertility, -.V. Sokolov, Pochvovedenie no. 4, 1953. 9 APRIL .v L7st of Russian Accessions, Library of Congress, 1953, Uncl. SOKOLOV, A. V. Battelle Technical Review July 19,,4 Agriculture 45' Appliesdoll of lindinami.! In Agd, -112-1 anti Sol' 'n"I I as. ussian.) A. V. cilinIny Ve3tnw Akstk-m" N,,.k ~SRRI, 1953, no. if. -34. Brief half-life of P" pennits short-tenn experimentation. Emitted P particles easily traced with Geiger counter. Mediod of application. /0- SOKOLO'l, Andr,~-i V a 3i I' ovi ch, AlIcadem.iii nauk SSSR. Methods of ac-ricultural chemistry in soil analys-is- --snusl for fi-21d and laboratory reBearch S59'3.A37 1954 1. Soils - Analysis 2. Agricultural chemistry. ggnilskii, X.P. Diagnostika 1. Sokolov, Andrei Vasil'evich, 1898 - ad. II. Ma pitaniia rastenii. *,OKOLOV, A.V.; SNRDOBOLISKIY, I.P.-,,.TYURIN, I.V., akademik, otvetetvenrqy redaktor; MARKOV, V.Ya., radaktor; ASTAFI MA, G.A., takhnicheekly reda:ktor [usa of phospho-me isotopes in agrochemical research] Primenenie izotopa fonforb v agrokhimicheakikh isoledovanitakh. Moskva, Izd-vo Akademit nauk SSSR. 1954. O'l p. (MLRA 7:10) (Agricii!.tural chemistr7) (Phosphorlt-e-Isotopes) A. 7j. "Detem,ination of the Assimilat-jon Capacity of Soil Phosphates and .-Fertilizers i-pith the Aid of Radioactive Isotopes of Phosphonts, 11 a paper presented at the Ator".5 for Peace Conference .7 Geneva, Switzerland., lclr,5 BARDIN, I.P., akademik, redak-tor; YOLIFKOVICH,S.I.; Pkademik, redak-tor; KAPUSTINSKIY, A.F., redaktor-, SOKOLOV, A.V.' professor, redaktor; POSPMOV,I.A., starshy-y nauchn" so ~~ redaktor; DWNEKA, 0.1. redaktor; VITUMA, A.V., tekhnicheakiy redaktor. [Studies in applied cbemistyy; a collection of scientific papers dedicated to the memory of Academician E.V.Britskel Issledovaniia po prikladnoi khImII; sbornik nauchno-iseledovatellskikh rabot, posviasbehonMi pamiati akademika X.Y.'Britake. Moskva, 1955. 342 p. (MLRA 8:11) 1. Chlen-korrespondent AN SSSR (for Kapastinskiy). 2. Akademiya nauk SSSR. Otdeleniye khimicheskikh nauk. (Chemistry) (Britske, Ergard Viktorov-ich, 1877-1953) SOKOLOV, A.V. Comparative tests With granulated, neutralized, ammonified and uWanulated superphosphates (resnlts of field experiments). Trudy NIUIF uo-157:74-112 '55. (MIRA 9:9) (Phosphates) SOKOLOV, A.V. Experiments with suparphosphates and #ther phosphorus fertilizers an Siarozoms. Trudy, NIUIF n0-157:113-136 155. (MIRA 9:9) (Phosphates) SOKOLOV, A.V. I............... '-.- Testing the effectiveness of granulated auperpheaphate having granules of various sizes (results of field experiments). ?rudy NIUIF no-157:137-144 155. (MLRA 9:9) (Phosphates) r7 ochernical properties of the sails i I, A-IV~'Sckolov. Pocliveredentel956,No.2,1-15~Aievicw W d. prs--6-rt,-Tfi:o use of fertilizer for various crops on the ,ffercU., . - . - a its, taking into consideratf the f t fit of the respective soils. The content of org.'oi,alte 'I P In the principal soil zones and some oFtheir subtypes, as reported in the literature, are used to Illustrate the poten- Vals of these soils. 23 references. P"'11 MAG-EUOV, G.A., kandidat sellskok-hozyaystvaaafth nauk [tranalatorl; TOMME, M.F., doktor sell sk&-:hozyajvstveax];rkh nawk,-Profassar'. redak-tor; SHMGIN. N.P., doktor biologichaskikh nauk, orofessor, redgktor; NOVIKOV. Ye.A., kandidat sell skokhozyaystvanny'ch aau)r-, S ., redektor; SMIRNOVA, N.I., tekhnicheskiy redaktor Eftqsiolaggicel significance of the vitamia B groun. Animal nutritton and fertility. Present-day opinions on livestock breeding methods. Trnnslated from the &nolhh, German 9nd French] Fiziologiche-akoe znachenie vitaminov gruppy B. Pitanie zhivotnyk)i i plodovitout'. Sovremennys vzgliady na metody razve(ienite sell ekokhoziaistvanw!!,~h zhivotuykh. Perevod s awFlUskogo, nometakogo i frantsurskopo G.A. ,ina, A.Nov3- Magidova. Pod red. i a predial. M.F.Tomme, M.P.Sberg A. kova. Mosk-va, Izd-vo inostr. lit-ry. 1957. 289 p. (Mu4j, 10:10) 1. International congress of animal husbandry. 6th, Ccpenhsagen, 1952. (Vitamins- B) (Stock and stockbreeding) so -- .... I . I "Agricultural chemistry of potassium and DhoaDhorue" by F.V.Chirikov. Reviewed by A.V. Sokolov, Pochvoyedenle no.3:122 Mr '57. (Y.LRA 10:7) ~Planti--Nutritlon) (Kinerals in soil) (Ghtrikov, F.V.) . USSR/Soil Cultivation. Organic Fertilizers. Abs Jour: Ref Zhur-Biologiya, No 1, 1958, 1265. j-4 recamended that the quantity of grass plawed under every year be increased by eliminating the creation of two fields with yearly sowing of unmixed clover. Card : 2/2 -2- "Tnfluence of Certq-Ln Environmental Factors on the Fo-"I-ciation and Acc-Luml-L=tion of Al'-'aloids in ~Ihnts,ll ro~ren and its Czm-,n nds ~euer submAtted for the Sm:~osiiun on tne Utilization o.L ~it 'Ll in ~-Iqnts, ~;bciety for Fiolc-r, Uriversit:,v of Zngland, 19-1c) ~'e - 58. SOKOLOV, j~.V. Rciserves of available phosphates in soil and effect of phosphate f,irtilizers on their accumilation [with aum-ary in Poehvnvedenio no.2:1-9 F '58. (KIRA 110) 1. %uchnyy institut po udobrenlyum i Ineektofunglaidam. (phosphates) TYUR1N, I.V., SOKOLOV, A-V- Soil t es and the effectiveness of fertilizers [with siunmai7 in Engliahle Izv. AN SSSR. Ser.biol.no.6:651-660 N-D 158 (mrRA 11m) 1. Pochvennvy institut im. V.V. Dokuchayeva AN SSSR. (FERTILIZERS AND RANMS) (Soils) SOKOLuV, A.V. Soils and the effectiveness of fertilizers [with summary in EnglishJ. Pochvovedenie no. 9:1-9 '58. (MIRA 11:10) 1. Pochvennyy institut imeni V.V.Dokuchayeva AN SSSR. (Soils) (Fertilizers and manures) SOKOLOV, A. V. 'I Chemical Probllems in Farming." repor-Z presented at the Pbmary Session, 8th Wndelyqv Congress, Moscow, 14-18 mar 59. TYURIN, I,V., nkademik, otv.red.; SOKMOV,_A_T.# prof.p otv.red.; KAVUN, P.K., red.izd-va; RYLINA, Tu,V., tekhn.re,!. (Agrochemical work on Kaliningrad Province] Agrokhimi- cheskie raboty v Ksliningradskoi oblasti. Roakya, 1959. 267 P. VIRA 12:8) lo Akademiya nauk SSSR. Pochvennyy institut imeni V.V.Doka- chayeva. (Kaliningrad Province--Agricultural cheMiBtry) SOKOLOV, A.V. Problems of agricultural chemistry in the U.S.S.R. Pochvovedenie no.1-8 Ap 159. ~MIPL 12!7) l.Fachvenny7 institut im. V.V. Dokuchayeva AN SSSR. (Agricultural chemistry) GORBMTOV, N.I.; SOKOWV, A.V.; POLYAKOV, Yu.1. At the Conference of soil scientists of the Polish People's Republic. Pechvodedenie no.2:115-116 F '59. W-iA 12:3) (Poland--Soil research) soT/64-59-4-1/27 AUTHOR I Deputy Ct.I.- or the Org..iz.lic. C- M-md-I-Y- C-,.dr-.., B..b- of the AS U53B TITLIS 1`111. C..,P,:s ~;.cf C~-..yftlcand Applied Ch=Istry (T111. M.nd.lay-.kiY d pban n.1 1 PIRIODICLL- Ithleii.h.skaya 1959, Ir 4, pp 1-10 (USSR) ABSTRACT I Fro. March 16 to 23. 1959, the *Izb1h traditional con r. g f s ' ah " ' * ' k - - Th. on~:: : r a . . . o n n""b ! "t; .d 0 :* , y I Y f So f the USSR, by th. V4ss'J-n-Y- khizich-.koy. i - .i D. 5cjty 1 U : . nd C ,..u itr Inyy k.. 33 . 3.1.% . 11.1i;t- Z a Co"it"s Gf the CQUO-11 Of of the US39 of Chemistry) "d by the min 1, I:r, hr ..... niy. 323H Mint.irj, of Higher 94u at I n of he 5311 in.ine,first pi .. ry tiAx . aoctribtitl.. of the Ch-'rz.. of the St.%. C.-tti.. : Card 216 f the C-unOll Of of It- 331 of Ch..i.lry bout th 0' V Ki .. Pr.bl... Of Scientific 7.armi..1 I,: 1h. . C .1 cal Ind.try- "I by the Ac.d.O1.1mo on the "Fundamental P."bl.mm of %he Polyor 1_A_JLLWz~ C,,..,.,,Y.. lh . 1 1 -at ri button. ,.ad. :ic~ : Iven:. Th- F.rlodi. 9y#%.. nis of D. I. M.44-I.Y., and CIIIII,Iry". ?=d_.n1.1 P-bla.. . f Ch.. .1 ic 31 ,,, of Ih Periodic Sy.t.. of D. 1. A. ad .ic'. A-2- . ftcbIssum Of Hd1..h..iatr7-, A R'" h.*Lsl ry~ r rI-o " ' ~ ' ' ' ~1 ht ~ of % he AgIrL.U 1...f v -r . f th . .h..- u . , 1621-410141-l'.kly instIt.t khi.t.h..k.C. -hInastray.miya (Scientific Radearch ramiLlut. of Ch..im.l "ChIc. C..St_O_ tion) 1. VjUkQljX*, - "IL-Im PrOtl--- Of the Ch..LO.1 A,- 1` par, Sul and Machine ConutrucsjoA-, coredponding Vdmb r she AS US a K. - -Present State of the Pr .I g .: T kLo LO of T. an~ 1_3an," 7 Of At-.i. Energy'. 1%1r UI Q1 1b, 1-111.1. of ..I r; Vh A. ..... a . ,b 3 , Of the Studi.o A.r. EI-nt. in tj~. R.,.bI!% :, .;o; public. Chi... l . , sclenst.l. n Ac.d.mici" - -Separation of IT _ ~ ~ of Cyal.bul.Ji... With Silver Nitrate-, Academician I. '--ur "Nu --YlO- %I.. f She Dchydration of the Cry.,., A.".4totan l n - III - %ig"ti.. or the 3t-ct- of 3oz. I.Ore..IO p t ._.-ff.--u Hao b; m ::% of Radioactive vsotopo.., A~.ftddzialsn Ca. Ch.- 1. IV J_g Id, rrofem.or of tho l.ond?m Univernity - '14%ration with x ks.~ot to 111trog.. and 0 y6 F ?. Deli, I r..Id..1 Of %1~. Card 416 F-day Society and Fr. f.... 0. Ord Unl rei %Y , f Th T." .1 gfffg%-i- It.-OIL ... With A. I . tz. t 0 . ~,: f Hydr: n a.- In V-' I. L i.gr.d on the 1e 41 : . Its I ti.n V- ...... to' I,,.- ._41 Z~yoglntsov. 0. To. ?trial rho ath Mondolorov Congroms am Oomral and Apyllod Chowlstry PUZOVICALs Zbormal morganichemkoy kbdali, 1959. Vol 4, Ir 9, pp 2170-2182 (USSH) ASSUAC71 Th. ConVoo. monsiluned In the title was hold I. Scaicow from March 16 to 23, 1959. Sort than 4000 delegates and guests froe 19 countries participate&. It was opened by the President of %be Orcenlratory Committee, Acadoulclan A. 1. Wormejame,, who asked the ;arti.l.pont. to discuss the do,oloyment of Oh.misqry A chemical twobnol.dy In the VBn In the Urn% of the decisions of the 21at Congress of 'be CF611. The follow%.% Somberm read papers In ths P1612417 408810081 V- 8- ?~dOeOv, Ch" AW, Of the Casud"Giveamy kcaltel "vote Simistrov 1183R ZI %Lbioii state Committee as Chemistry of the Council of InRistere, VAU~j Ticks of asiontifts,4" technical Pragross Is the Ctestisal 194motryl T, A. Urflas Usto ProMems of Pollmor Chowlstryl L. 9. Issmayissavs The Perictis @rates MA arpois Choulstryl 1. besmavo Isais Pralsleam of Chemical noetical V. 1. ftllojml The trances state of D. 1. massialt7ov, 4 Foriodle Laos A. P. Tleassrsdavs Deals P"111"s of Ralivalumalstrys T. a. Im"Itgarlstr lasim, Prolp2omm of lsseabeuisstrys-Aa~wwi Chemical Prolsts" of Agriosloars is the 11111111 V.I. stasymme gals Uake of the Constructive, of Chemical Imommory MA Apparaftal To. t, 11VrUSt Dust* Problesm of tbe ?boost or Cbeuio&x U%k&Pj and A. P. Alokosefirovs Obassloal Preap"118 for the gov of Alostle Ismara. As emal to all assesdate of On tin win dram is is Wmeb %My arm ember"A In Weto an mceir stnmtb to the ftlftlbwst of the grout ticks Po"d ty ~b~jist Qsss~vooo 0! the TYURIN, I.V.; SOKO_WV, BUSHINSKIY, V.P.; SOBOLEV, S.S.; FRANTSESSOIT, V.i. ; KARPINSKIY, N.P.; BALTABO, N.K.; GRIINCHENKO, A.M.; KRUPSKIY, N.K. Aleksei Nikanorovich Sokolovskii; obituaxy. Pochvovedenie no.10:124-125 0 159. (MIRA 13-2) (Sokolovelcii, Aleksei Nikanorovich, 1884-1959) SOKOLOV, A.V.; GRACHEV, D.G. ... I - Agrochemical, technical, and economic eva-luaticn of mechanized application of simple and concentrated phosphorus and mixed fertilizers. [Trudy] NIUIF n(...164-57-59 '59. (MIRA 15:5) (Fertilizers and manures) (Phosphates) SOKOLOV) A.V.; MAZAYEVA, M.M. Effect of magnesium fertilizers in relation to the cheracteristics of plants and soil. [Trudy] NIUIF no.164:59-61 159. (MIRA 15:5) (Plants, Effect of magnesium on) __ SOKO-LOV _31_A_V_-- - Agrochemical evaluation of prospective and new phosphorus fer- tilizers. [Trudy) NIUIF no.164:61-62 '59. (KIRA 15:5) (Phosphates) (Fertilizers and manures) SOKOLOV, A.V. 4. - Studying the uptake of phosphates by plants and the met-abolism of phosphorus compounds in plants by the method of tagged atoms. [Trudy] NIUIF no.164:62 '59. (MIRA 15:5) (Plants-149tabolism) (Phosphorus--Isotopes) '~'~OKOLOV. A. V. "Methods For D,'ennining ITie Stock Of Soluble And Available Phosphates In Soils By Labelled P3~,,. repor-t submitted for the 7t11 Congress of International. Society of Soi-1 Science Madison, Wisconsin, 15-23 Aug 60. A.NTIPOV-KARATAYEV, I.N., akademik, otv.red.; TYURIN, I.V., glavnyy red.; GORBUNOV, N.I., red.; VERIGINA, K.V., red.; ZONN, S.Y., red.; IVANOVA, Te.N., red,; KMROV-ZIKHMAN, O.K., red.; KONONOVA, M.M., red.; LOBOVA, Te.V., red.; MISHUSTIN, Te.K., red.; RODE, A.A., red.; ROZANOV, A.N., red.;_SOKOLOT A Y., red.; FRIDLAND, V.M., red.; SHUVAWV, S.A., red.; nWIMOV, A.L., red.izd-va; MAMI, Te.V., tekhn.red. [Reports of Soviet soil scientists to the 7th International Congress in the U.S.A.] Doklady sovetskikh pochvovedov k VII Mezhdunarodnoma kongressu v SShA. Moskva, Izd-vo Akad.nauk S=. 196o. 487 -P. (MIRA 13:10) 1. International Congress of Soil Science. 7th. 2. AN Tadzhik- skoy SSR (for Antipov-Karatayev). 3. Pochvennyy inatitut im. V.V. Dokuchayeva Akademii nauk SSSR, Moskva (for Antipov-Karstayev. Gorbunov, (Continued on next card) ANTIPOV-KARATAYEV, I.N.---(continued) Card 2. Ivanova,,Kononovay Rozanov,.Yridland, Sokolov).. 4. Iaboratoriya lesovedeniya Akademii nauk SSSR. Moskva (for Zonn). 5. Vsesoyuzny-y nauclino-issledovatellskiy institut udobreniy i agropochvovedeniya Vsesoyuznoy ordena Lenina Akademii sellskokhoz.nBuk imeni V.I.Lenina i Institut zemledeliya akademii sell skokhoz.nauk Belorusskoy SSR (for Kedrov-Zikhman). 6. Institut mikrobiologii Akademii nauk SSSR, Moak" (for Hishustin). 7. Nauchnyy institut po udobreniyam i insektofungi- taidam im. Ta.V.Samoylove, Moskva (for Sokolov). (Soil research) KATALYMOV, M.Y., otv.red.; KOROLEY, L.I.. red.;_�q~K(~~OTAJ., red.; TURCHIN, F.T., red.; UNANYANTS, T.P., red.; Da6GOPOLOV, K,I., red.; GRIGORTYEVA, A.I., red.; 'R OD, A.I., tekhn.red. [Manual on mineral fertilizers; theoretical and practical aspects of their use] Spravochnik po minerallnym udobreniiam; teoriia i praktika primeneniia. Moskva, Gos.izd-vo sellkhoz. lit-r7, 1960. 551 P. (MIRA 14:1) (Fertilizers and manures) 3-U-YU-L-U-VI A. V. aria ZIA-,HiKOiA, A. -L,. "Psychologische Studien fiber den Mechanismis der Wirking von Sch-lammproze- duren. " report submitted for the 7th Intl. Cong. of Moorland Research Frankskavy Lagne/ Franzensbad-Prague, 15-19 Sep 60- SCKOLOVj A.Y.. doktor sel'skokhoz.nauk. otv.red.; ASKINAZI, D.L., otv.red.; SMOBOLISKIY, I.F., kand.sellskokhoz.njuk, otv.red.; MAR OV, V.Ya., red.izd-va; SIMKINA, Ye.N., tekhn.red.; GUSIKOVA, O.M., tekhn.red. (Agrochemical methods of soil research; manual for field and laboratory investigations] Agrokhimicheskie matody issledovaniia pochv; rukovodstvo dlia polevykh i laboratornykh isaledovanii. Izd-3., parer. i dop. Koakva,. 1960. 555 p. [__Xbum of colored drawings for plant nutrition diagnosis: supplement to K.P. Magaitakii'a article] ___Allbom tavetnykh risunkov po diagnoutike pitanlia rastenil. Frilozhenie k Btat'e E.FaMagnit5kogoo 1960o (HIILA 14:3) 1. Akademiya nauk S=. Pochvennyy institut im. V.V.Dokuchayeva. (Soil research)