The year begins with the first of Tishrei: Rosh HaShanah 2a, 8b
Adding on from the previous year, to the start of the Sabbatical Year: Rosh HaShanah 8b-9a; Makkot 8b
Produce which ripens during the Sabbatical Year: Makkot 8b
Punishment for cultivating seeds during the sabbatical year: Makkot 21b
Types of agricultural labor, and their permissibility or prohibition during shemitah
Hoeing: Succah 44b
Working a tree which is "virginal," refers to a tree which has never been chopped back: Niddah 8b
Which Types of Produce are [not] under Sabbatical Year-Rules
Status of produce which isn't ordinarily protected as it grows: Succah 39b
The Sabbatical Year and the need to harvest the Omer-Grain: Rosh HaShanah 9a; Makkot 8b
The Sabbatical Year And Paupers' Tithe, in Ammon and Moav: Chagigah 3b
Trees; differentiating between wood which is used in a manner which will/won't destroy it: Succah 40a
Trees which don't produce fruit, and [don't] have sap: Niddah 8a, 8b
Tree sap: Niddah 8b
Animal fodder: Shabbat 68a
Vegetables buried beneath leaves: Shabbat 113a
Dirt from outside Israel, on a boat in Israel: Gittin 7b
Dirt in a pot without holes: Gittin 7b-8a
Produce from Surya: Gittin 8a, 8b
Citrons: Rosh HaShanah 14b-15b; Succah 39b
Spices: Niddah 8a, 8b
How much time before the Sabbatical Year a plant must have been planted/grafted, for it to be considered produce from before the Year: Rosh HaShanah 9b-10b
Produce which grew [1/3] during the Sabbatical Year, but was still in the process of growing when the Year ended: Rosh HaShanah 9a, 12b-13b
Certain species of onions and beans, which were grown without watering for 30 days before the Sabbatical Year began: Rosh HaShanah 14a
Before the Sabbatical Year Begins
Permission to plow a field containing 10 saplings within a certain area, until Rosh HaShanah, as a Law Spoken to Moshe at Sinai: Succah 34a, 44a
Business involving Sabbatical Produce
The Divine Punishment for merchandising Sabbatical produce: Succah 40b; Bava Metzia 71a
How one who uses Sabbatical produce as merchandise will descend through levels of financial desperation: Kiddushin 20a-b; Bava Metzia 71a
Buying Sabbatical Produce included with other Produce: Succah 39a
Using Sabbatical Produce to pay laborers: Succah 44b
Concern for Causing Unwitting Error if one buys Sabbatical produce from a person who won't keep the money away from ordinary use: Succah 39a-b
Items exchanged for Sabbatical Produce, such that they gain Sabbatical Year status
Redeeming Sabbatical produce with money or other fruit: Succah 40b, 41a; Bechorot 9b
Redemption of an item exchanged for Sabbatical produce: Succah 41a
Redeeming money from sale of Sabbatical produce, on other produce: Succah 39a-b, 40b-41a
The edict forbidding redemption of Sabbatical produce on a live animal: Succah 40b-41a
One may not destroy produce of Sabbatical Year: Pesachim 52b
Stage of growth at which it becomes forbidden to destroy the produce: Pesachim 52b-53a
Using wood from the Sabbatical year, for a fire to heat water for laundry or flax-soaking: Succah 40a-b
Using Sabbatical fruit for medication: Succah 40a-b
Using Sabbatical fruit for emetics: Succah 40b
Pouring juice of Sabbatical fruit on the floor, to create a pleasant odor: Succah 40b
Is there an obligation to separate the challah tithe from dough made from Sabbatical produce?: Bechorot 12b
Destruction of the Produce at the end of the Year - Biur Shemitah
Whether in order to require destruction, the produce must have grown and been collected in the 7th year: Rosh HaShanah 15a
Yehudah, Galil and the other side of the Jordan are considered separate areas, with their own subdivision, regarding the time to destroy produce of Sabbatical Year: Pesachim 52b
Determination of the time for produce which has left its place of origin: Pesachim 50b, 52a
Determination of the time for a pickled mixture of 3 kinds of produce: Pesachim 52a
Whether produce which is traded for Sabbatical produce also requires destruction: Succah 40b
Whether produce of Israel has to return there for destruction, or may be destroyed anywhere: Pesachim 52b