In the first chapter, The Growing of Grains, Song Yingxing wrote about the great necessity of rural farmers in society, and although they were emulated by tradition, were scoffed at by aristocrats throughout time. Song Yingxing began the chapter with the context of this paragraph in mind: -powered
chain pumps from the
Tiangong Kaiwu. Song wrote about the general terms used in agriculture, saying that the "hundred grains" referred to crops in general, while the "five grains" were specifically
sesamum,
legumes,
wheat,
panicled
millet, and glutinous millet (
rice was not included in this, says Song, because the ancients were only used to the environment of
northern China, which was devoid of rice at the time). He wrote about the meticulous and proper
cultivation of each crop, as well as how to avoid agricultural disasters in the process. In aiding the text, he also provided many different drawn illustrations, including a man loosening the soil by ploughing with an
ox, soil broken into fine particles by an ox-drawn
harrow, men engaging in foot weeding and hand weeding of rice, a vertical
waterwheel with hollow wooden cylinders dipping water into an open woodwork tub feeding an
irrigation canal, a cylinder-type
chain pump powered by a vertical waterwheel placed in a narrow, low-lying stream with a mounted rotating wheel placed at the top of an elevated plane, whereupon the cylinders fed water into an irrigation canal, a wooden river
dam correcting the flow of water around a field of crops, a
sluice gate controlling the flow of a water channel, a square-pallet chain pump powered by a horizontal waterwheel, connected by an
axle to a gear-tooth wheel above, which in turn engaged a vertical gear-tooth wheel, another square-pallet chain pump employing an ox-drawn set of geared wheels, two different types of foot-treadle operated chain pumps, a
counterweighted
lever for raising or lowering a bucket, a
pulley-wheel for raising or lowering a bucket, an ox-drawn plough-seeder with a cone-shaped filter, an ox-drawn pair of stone rollers, used for pressing
seeds into the soil, the simpler process of sewing seeds by hand and pressing them into the dirt by foot, and finally, an illustration of men cultivating wheat with broad-headed hoes. In another chapter, The Preparation of Grains, he also provided illustrations for rolling rice grains with a wooden ox-drawn roller, a crank-operated rotary-fan
winnowing machine that separated
husks, a hand-operated wooden hulling mill, a hand-operated earthen hulling machine, a process of sieving to separate husk-free grains, two types of foot-operated
trip hammers, a
hydraulic-powered trip hammer powered by a waterwheel that rotated an axle of overhead
cams, a
horse-drawn hulling mill, an oxen-drawn grinding mill, a grinding mill operated by a vertical waterwheel, and a rolling mill operated by a horizontal waterwheel, the waterwheel placed in a rushing current found under a wooden deck that rotated the axle of the stone roller above within the interior of a building. ==Nautics==