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Comments: On Distribution of CIPC in Soil

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 June 2017

Blaine O. Pray
Affiliation:
Research Laboratory of Columbia-Southern Chemical Corporation, Barberton, Ohio
Eugene D. Witman
Affiliation:
Columbia-Southern Chemical Corporation, Pittsburgh, Pa
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Abstract

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Type
Notes
Information
Weeds , Volume 2 , Issue 4 , October 1953 , pp. 300 - 301
Copyright
Copyright © 1953 Weed Science Society of America 

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References

Literature Cited

1. Aldrich, R. J. Residues in Soil. J. Agricultural and Food Chemistry 1: 258. 1953.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
2. Anderson, W. P., Linder, P. J., and Mitchell, J. W. Evaporation of Some Plant Growth Regulators and its Possible Effect on their Activity. Science 116: 502. 1952.CrossRefGoogle ScholarPubMed
3. Freed, V. H. Some Factors Influencing the Herbicidal Efficacy of Isopropyl N–Phenylcarbamate. Weeds 1: 48. 1951.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
4. Gard, L. N., and Rudd, N. Isopropyl N–(3–Chlorophenyl)–carbamate (CIPC) in Soil and Crops. J. Agricultural and Food Chemistry 1: 630. 1953.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
5. Smith, R. J., and Ennis, W. B. Jr. Studies on the Downward Movement of 2,4–D and CIPC in Soils. Southern Weed Conference, Sixth Proceedings, 6371. 1953.Google Scholar