RFF6X9GY–Glyphosate-ready Palmer pigweed thriving (uncontrolled) in Roundup ready cotton where Roundup has been applied and controlled other weed species
RM2HECDG9–Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Cotton Plant, Woodruff County, Arkansas.
RFF6X9GB–Crop consultant uses tablet to make notes of his observations while checking field of no till cotton in peak fruit development stage
RM2AWG7X2–Productive farming . rotation of crops is kept up as with corn, wheat, andlegumes, there is little danger from disease. Insect Enemies.—The cotton plant is not seriouslyaffected with insects except in the squares and bolls. Twoinsects do most of this damage, the boll-weevil and theboll-worm. The Mexican bolUweevil has now spread over the south-eastern and central parts of Texas, much of Louisiana andthe adjacent portions of Mississippi, Arkansas and Oklahoma.The area is increasing rapidly. In those sections only suchfarmers as practice the best methods of cotton cultiure areable to continue ra
RM2EGD9JA–Cotton Plant, Arkansas, map 1968, 1:24000, United States of America by Timeless Maps, data U.S. Geological Survey
RMCEM9CF–Agriculture - Closeup of a pink blossom and green squares on a mid growth cotton plant / Arkansas, USA.
RFHPNB9J–Closeup image shows a cotton boll still in the bud. It is beginning to open up. Plant also has cotton bolls at maturity.
RFBFPB96–Cotton fields in Arkansas
RF2H528BE–Biscoe, Arkansas, USA - October 18, 2021: One of the Cotton plantations along AR-33
RM2HECDFE–Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Cotton Plant, Woodruff County, Arkansas.
RFF6X9GF–Crop consultant uses tablet to make notes of his observations while checking field of no till cotton in peak fruit development stage
RM2AX43RN–The Ozark Mountain region of Missouri and Arkansas as it appears along the line of the Kansas City southern railway . IN THE ORCHARD OF THE SOUTHERN ORCHARD PLANTING CO., HORATIO, ARK. THE OZARK REGION. YOUNG COTTON FIELD, HORATIO, ARK. pumping station, the county jail, ice plant,bottling works and nearly all mercantilehouses. The dwellings are substantialframe buildings of modern design. Nearly all the streets are graded and thesidewalks paved with cement or concrete.Free mail delivery, rural telephones, elec-tric light service, etc., are not novelties inDe Queen. The city has six religious c
RMCEM9DB–Agriculture - Closeup of a green cotton boll in mid summer / Arkansas, USA.
RFRN396X–Closeup image shows a cotton boll still in the bud. It is beginning to open up. Plant also has cotton bolls at maturity.
RMCEM9R2–Row of cotton seedlings at the cotyledon stage, planted in a conventional tillage field / near England, Arkansas, USA.
RFBFPAYK–Cotton fields in Arkansas
RMCEM9RM–Closeup of a cotton seedling at the cotyledon stage, planted in a conventional tillage field / near England, Arkansas, USA.
RMCEM9RB–Closeup of a cotton seedling at the cotyledon stage, planted in a conservation tillage field / near England, Arkansas, USA.
RMCEM9CJ–Closeup of cotton bolls in the early stage of development. The pink blooms have dried up prior to the boll formation / Arkansas.
RMCEM9T6–Agriculture - The toe of a farmers (growers) boot next to cotton seedlings in the field / near England, Arkansas, USA.
RMCEMD1C–Agriculture - A John Deere tractor and 12-row MaxEmerge planter plant cotton on a bedded field in mid Spring / Arkansas, USA.
RM2HECDFM–Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Cotton Plant, Woodruff County, Arkansas.
RM2AX4FTA–The Ozark Mountain region of Missouri and Arkansas as it appears along the line of the Kansas City southern railway . BRINGING IN THE COTTON, MENA, ARK. 31 THE OZARK REGION. PEACH ORCHARD, POTEAU, OKLA. Wanted: Gents furnishings store, shoestore, general merchandise store, printingoflBce, steam laundry, hardware store, tinshop, notion store, dentist. Good openingfor cannery, ice plant, electric light plant. The other towns in Scott County, on theArkansas Western branch of the K. C. S.Ry., are the following: Bates, Arkansas From Kansas City, Mo., 351 miles; popula-tion, U. S. Census 272. A lumb
RFF6X9GC–Crop consultant uses tablet to make notes of his observations while checking field of no till cotton in peak fruit development stage
RMCEMD1N–Agriculture - A John Deere tractor and 12-row MaxEmerge planter plant cotton on a bedded field in mid Spring / Arkansas, USA.
RM2HECDFP–Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Cotton Plant, Woodruff County, Arkansas.
RMCEM9RT–Closeup of cotton seedlings pushing their way through the soil crust during emergence, planted in a conventional tillage field.
RM2AWF0NW–Seedtime and harvest : a graphic summary of seasonal work on farm crops . tton planting is general during the month of April. It end^usually by May 21. Records from nine localities in Georgia. Alabama. Mississippi,Louisiana, and Arkansas show a requirement of 12 to 16 hours of man labor and 13to 26 (average 20> hours of mule labor to prepare an acre of land for cotton, 2 hoursman lalx)r and also of horse labor to plant an acre, 15 to 22 (average 17) hours laborboth man and horse to harrow and cultivate, 13 to 30 (average IS) hours man laboronly to chop and hoe, and from 45 to 90 hours of ma
RMCEM9GD–Agriculture - Mature open harvest stage cotton bolls at sunset / Eastern Arkansas, USA.
RMCEM9H2–Agriculture - Rows of cotton seedlings growing in a conventionally tilled field / Arkansas, USA.
RFF6X9GK–Crop consultant uses tablet to make notes of his observations while checking field of no till cotton in peak fruit development stage
RFF6X9GN–Crop consultant checking no till Roundup ready cotton at four leaf stage with dead weeds controlled by post emergence herbicide, most likely Roundup
RM2HECDF2–Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Cotton Plant, Woodruff County, Arkansas.
RM2AG69XR–. Louisiana and Arkansas railway; its territory industries and financial condition ... NA AND ARKANSAS RAILWAY a $100,000 cotton seed oil mill, an iron foundry, a brickyard and a canning factory. A short distance from thetown is a bottling works that ships out a considerableamount of mineral water. In the wood-working line are agood sized planing mill, a spoke factory with a daily capacityof 10,000 spokes, a handle factory and a stave and head-ing plant with an output of twenty carloads a week. With a population of about 1,600 people at the time ofthe last census, Hope has more than doubled in
RMCEM9GP–Agriculture - Rows of cotton seedlings growing in a conventionally tilled field / Arkansas, USA.
RMCEMACW–Agriculture - Field of mid growth cotton plants at the peak of the fruit set stage / Arkansas, USA.
RMCEMA8N–Agriculture - Large field of mid growth cotton at boll set stage / near England, Arkansas, USA.
RMCEM9DH–Agriculture - Mature high-yield open cotton bolls at harvest stage backlit by late afternoon sunlight / Arkansas, USA.
RMCEMA9C–Agriculture - Large field of mid growth cotton being furrow irrigated / near England, Arkansas, USA.
RFF6X9GT–Crop consultant checking no till Roundup ready cotton at four leaf stage with dead weeds controlled by post emergence herbicide, most likely Roundup
RMCEMB7Y–A farmer (grower) inspects his mature harvest stage high yield cotton crop to determine when to begin the harvest / Arkansas.
RM2HECDEK–Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Cotton Plant, Woodruff County, Arkansas.
RM2AG67JE–. Louisiana and Arkansas railway; its territory industries and financial condition ... SPOKE FACTORY AT HOPE LOUISIANA AND ARKANSAS RAILWAY 63 Staves. Among the other industries are a grist mill, twobottling works, a cotton gin, a planing mill and a handlefactory. A sawmill with a capacity of perhaps 60,000 feeta day is building an extensive plant and negotiations areunder way for the location of another sawmill and a foundry and machine shop. JENA Jena is at present the southern terminus of the Louisi-ana and Arkansas Railway. The town is situated in thecenter of probably the finest body of l
RFF6X9GR–Crop consultant checking no till Roundup ready cotton at four leaf stage with dead weeds controlled by post emergence herbicide, most likely Roundup
RMCEMB85–A farmer (grower) inspects his mature harvest stage high yield cotton crop to determine when to begin the harvest / Arkansas.
RMCEMA2E–Agriculture - Large mid growth cotton field in the advanced stage of fruit set / near England, Arkansas, USA.
RM2HECDG7–Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Cotton Plant, Woodruff County, Arkansas.
RMCEMA32–Agriculture - Large mid growth cotton field in the advanced boll set stage / near England, Arkansas, USA.
RM2AG67WC–. Louisiana and Arkansas railway; its territory industries and financial condition ... HOPE ICE PLANT. SPOKE FACTORY AT HOPE LOUISIANA AND ARKANSAS RAILWAY 63 Staves. Among the other industries are a grist mill, twobottling works, a cotton gin, a planing mill and a handlefactory. A sawmill with a capacity of perhaps 60,000 feeta day is building an extensive plant and negotiations areunder way for the location of another sawmill and a foundry and machine shop. JENA Jena is at present the southern terminus of the Louisi-ana and Arkansas Railway. The town is situated in thecenter of probably the
RFF6X9GP–Crop consultant checking no till Roundup ready cotton at four leaf stage with dead weeds controlled by post emergence herbicide, most likely Roundup
RFF6X9DN–Glyphosate-ready Palmer pigweed thriving (uncontrolled) in Roundup ready cotton where Roundup has been applied and controlled other weed species
RFF3MF5W–Plant,Cotton,Farm,Arkansas
RMCEMA36–Agriculture - Large mid growth cotton field in the advanced boll set stage / near England, Arkansas, USA.
RM2HECDET–Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Cotton Plant, Woodruff County, Arkansas.
RMCEM9DT–Agriculture - Closeup of mature high-yield open cotton bolls at harvest stage backlit by late afternoon sunlight / Arkansas, USA
RM2AX44G3–The Ozark Mountain region of Missouri and Arkansas as it appears along the line of the Kansas City southern railway . to reportsis to be extended eastward and westward. The Prairie Oil & Gas Company of Okla-homa has an oil pipe line running through JDe Queen from the Oklahoma fields to the»Gulf and maintains an immense pumpingfetation at this point. The local manufac-Ituring plants consist of three yellow pinejsawmills, a large hardwood sawmill, DeQueen bakery, steam laundry, ice and elec-tric light plant, cold storage, municipalwaterworks system, cotton gin and a fruitcannery. The mercantile
RMCEMA3N–Agriculture - Field of mid growth cotton at peak boll set stage, at sunrise / near England, Arkansas, USA.
RMCEM9TA–Large field of mature defoliated cotton plants at harvest stage in late afternoon Autumn light / near Little Rock, Arkansas, USA
RMCEMD5H–Agriculture - Field of cotton seedlings in mid Spring with a dark, stormy sky and rainbow in the background / Arkansas, USA.
RFF3MF5R–Plant,Cotton,Farm,Arkansas
RFF3MGP6–Plant,Cotton,Farm,Arkansas
RM2HECDFG–Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Cotton Plant, Woodruff County, Arkansas.
RMRGBX6C–. Bulletin of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Agriculture; Agriculture. UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE. BULLETIN No. 526 Mgttb Contribution from the Bureau of Plant Industry WM. A. TAYLOR, Chief jS&p^&L Washington, D. C. PROFESSIONAL PAPER August 28, 1918 EXPERIMENTS WITH SINGLE-STALK COTTON CULTURE IN LOUISIANA, ARKANSAS, AND NORTH CAROLINA. By P. V. Cardon, Assistant Agronomist, Office of Crop Acclimatization. CONTENTS. Importance of single-stalk cotton culture .. Localities where experiments were made Methods of procedure Selection of cooperators Plan of the experiments
RMCEMD4R–Agriculture - Field of cotton seedlings in mid Spring with a dark, stormy sky and rainbow in the background / Arkansas, USA.
RFF3MGP1–Plant,Cotton,Farm,Arkansas,Boll
RM2HECDF5–Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Cotton Plant, Woodruff County, Arkansas.
RMRGC3EK–. Bulletin of the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Agriculture; Agriculture. UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE BULLETIN No. 526 Contribution from the Bureau of Plant Industry WM. A. TAYLOR, Chief Washington, D. C. PROFESSIONAL PAPER August 28, 1918 EXPERIMENTS WITH SINGLE-STALK COTTON CULTURE IN LOUISIANA, ARKANSAS AND NORTH CAROLINA By P. V. CARDON, Assistant Agronomist CONTENTS Page Introduction 1 Localities Where Experiments Were Made 3 Methods of Procedure 4 Selection of Cooperators 4 Plan of the Experiments 5 Thinning Single-Stalk Rows ... 5 Recording the Yields ...... 5 Results Obta
RMCEMD46–Agriculture - Field of cotton seedlings in mid Spring with a dark, stormy sky and rainbow in the background / Arkansas, USA.
RFF3MGP2–Plant,Cotton,Farm,Arkansas,Boll
RM2HECDFC–Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Cotton Plant, Woodruff County, Arkansas.
RMRGTN8D–. Bulletin. 1901-13. Agriculture; Agriculture. 114 VARIETIES OF AMERICAN UPLAND COTTON. Todd Early. Alabama Bulletin 140. Not now grown. Todd Improved. Big-Boll Group Arkansas: Faulkner and Lafayette counties. Georgia: Coweta, Liberty, and Meriwether counties. Louisiana: Franklin Parish. Mississipi^i: Holmes County. North Carolina: Mecklenburg County. South Carolina: Greenwood County. Alabama Bulletin 140. Georgia Bulletins 47, 52, 63, 66. Developed by selection by P. W. Todd, Grantville, Ga. Plant medium in height, stocky; limbs heavy, usually 2; fruiting branches with joints of medium length
RMCEMD34–Agriculture - Field of cotton seedlings in mid Spring with a dark, stormy sky and rainbow in the background / Arkansas, USA.
RFF3MGP3–Plant,Cotton,Farm,Arkansas,Boll
RM2HECDFA–Sanborn Fire Insurance Map from Cotton Plant, Woodruff County, Arkansas.
RMRPK2EB–. American bee journal. Bee culture; Bees. VOL. LXI—NO. 10 HAMILTON, ILL., OCTOBER, 1921 MONTHLY, $1.50 A YFAR THE COTTON PLANT AS A SOURCE OF NECTAR Notes on the Behavior of the Plant in the Lone Star State, where it is an Important Field Crop—By H. B. Parks THE relationship betwe<Ti the honeybee and the cotton plant has become a matter of peculiar interest, as in many places honey is a valuable and about the only compan- ion crop of cotton. In the southeast- ern part of the United States, cotton is looked upon as being a poor honey plant, while in Texas, parts oi Okla- homa, Arkansas and
RMCEMD3J–Agriculture - Field of cotton seedlings in mid Spring with a dark, stormy sky and rainbow in the background / Arkansas, USA.
RMCEMAKD–Side-by-side mid growth crops of grain corn (left) and cotton (right). Corn and cotton are excellent rotation crops / Arkansas.
RFF3MGP5–Plant,Cotton,Farm,Arkansas,Boll
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