- and
hydroponic growth medium.
Mineral wool is also
known as
mineral fiber,
mineral cotton,
mineral fiber, man-made
mineral fiber (MMMF), and man-made vitreous...
-
composition of
cotton is as follows:
Cellulose 91.00%
Water 7.85% Protoplasm,
pectins 0.55% Waxes,
fatty substances 0.40%
Mineral salts 0.20%
Cotton has a more...
-
grade mineral oil-saturated
paper napkins placed in
hives are used as a
treatment for
tracheal and
other mites. It is also used
along with a
cotton swab...
-
factory for
processing raw
mineral cotton and was
later adapted to
produce stitched mineral cotton slabs,
mineral cotton wool,
basaltic fiber, basaltic...
-
meaning "
cotton castle" in Turkish, is a
natural site in
Denizli Province in
southwestern Turkey. The area is
famous for a
carbonate mineral left by the...
- and camelids. The term may also
refer to
inorganic materials, such as
mineral wool and gl**** wool, that have
properties similar to
animal wool. As an...
-
source through the
mineral.[citation needed]
Ulexite is
found in
evaporite deposits and the
precipitated ulexite commonly forms a "
cotton ball" tuft of acicular...
- fox, beaver, etc.
Mineral fibers include the
asbestos group.
Asbestos is the only
naturally occurring long
mineral fiber. Six
minerals have been classified...
-
California and the ****ociated
Shasta Springs.
Shasta began as The
Shasta Mineral Springs Company at the base of Mt. Shasta, California, in 1889. In 1928...
-
Nitrocellulose (also
known as
cellulose nitrate,
flash paper,
flash cotton, guncotton,
pyroxylin and
flash string,
depending on form) is a
highly flammable...