Note, "chari" in this paper is Andropogon Sorghum, and "wheat"
is Triticum vulgare.
Uniformity trials carried out at Rawalpindi, India.
The area consisted of 5 fields (D4,D5,D6,D7,D8), each 5 acres in
size. Each of these 5 fields was divided into three sub-divisions A,
B, C, by means of two strong bunds each 5 feet wide. These 3
sub-divisions were divided into 5 blocks, each consisting of 13
experimental plots with 14 non-experiment strips 5 feet wide
separating the plots from the other. The dimensions of the plot were
207 ft 5 in by 19 ft 1 in.
The same land was used for 4 consecutive crops. The first crop was
wheat, followed by chari (sorghum), followed by wheat 2 times.
Field width: 207.42 * 5 plots = 1037.1 feet
Field length: (19.08+5)*39 rows = 939.12 feet
Conclusions: It is evident, therefore, that soil heterogenity as
revealed by any one crop cannot be a true index of the subsequent
behavior of that area with respect to other crops. Even the same crop
raised in different seasons has not shown any constancy as regards
soil heterogeneity.