Search results for "Charcoal"

showing 10 items of 102 documents

Some intriguing items in the history of adsorption

1994

Abstract Clay was already used in antiquity as a drying and bleaching agent, a carrier for paints, and for various medical purposes. Sand was applied for water desalination. Charcoal was recommended as an antidote Based on Lowitz' discovery of the decolorizing effect in 1785, charcoal was used for the purification first of sugar. The patents of Ostrejko in 1900 opened the way for its industrial application. Already in the Bible we find the description of an adsorption experiment. The systematic research began 1773 when Scheele observed the adsorption of air by charcoal using a volumetric apparatus. The first adsorption measuring instruments were hygrometers as described by Nicholas of Cues …

AdsorptionTextileHygrometerPolymer scienceChemistrybusiness.industryvisual_artvisual_art.visual_art_mediumMineralogyWater desalinationPorositybusinessCharcoal
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Factors affecting the choice of cooking fuel, cooking place and respiratory health in the Accra metropolitan area, Ghana.

2005

Indoor air pollution resulting from the combustion of solid fuels has been identified as a major health threat in the developing world. This study examines how the choice of cooking fuel, place of cooking and behavioural risk factors affect respiratory health infections in Accra, Ghana. About 65·3% of respondents use charcoal and 4·2% use unprocessed wood. A total of 241 (25·4%) respondents who cook had had respiratory health symptoms in the two weeks preceding the study. Household socioeconomic status and educational attainment of respondents were found to have a significant impact on respiratory health through their particular influence on the choice of cooking fuel. Households that use w…

AdultLung DiseasesDeveloping countryGhanaIndoor air qualityEnvironmental protectionEnvironmental healthMedicineHumansCookingSocioeconomic statusRespiratory healthPovertybusiness.industryIncidence (epidemiology)technology industry and agriculturePublic Health Environmental and Occupational Healthfood and beveragesGeneral Social SciencesInfantMetropolitan areaWoodEducational attainmentSocioeconomic FactorsAir Pollution IndoorCharcoalChild PreschoolHousingFemalebusinessJournal of biosocial science
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Probable progress in the therapy of organophosphate poisoning

1976

Whether or not extracorporeal hemodialysis or hemoperfusion with coated activated charcoal might be used in eliminating organophosphates following poisoning with nitrostigmine, demeton-S-methyl sulfoxide, or dimethoate was here examined. Nitrostigmine could not be hemodialysed. The other two organophosphates, on the other hand could be well eliminated from the blood by hemodialysis. The clearance rates for demeton-S-methyl sulfoxide and dimethoate were 52.98 ml/min and 59.07 ml/min respectively, at a blood flow rate of 100 ml/min. The clearance values for hemoperfusion with coated activated charcoal were higher under the same trial conditions, the values being 83.70 ml/min for demeton-S-met…

AdultMaleHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesismedicine.medical_treatmentToxicologyOrganophosphate poisoningchemistry.chemical_compoundOrganophosphate PoisoningRenal DialysismedicineHumansDimethoateParathionPoisoningOrganophosphateOrganothiophosphorus CompoundsGeneral Medicinemedicine.diseaseHemoperfusionPerfusionActivated charcoalchemistryCharcoalAnesthesiaHemodialysisPerfusionClearance rateDimethoateArchives of Toxicology
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Efficacy of gut lavage, hemodialysis, and hemoperfusion in the therapy of paraquat or diquat intoxication

1976

Clinical and in vitro investigations were carried out to test the efficacy of gut lavage, hemodialysis, and hemoperfusion in the treatment of poisoning with paraquat or diquat. In a patient suffering from diquat intoxication 130 times more diquat was removed by gut lavage 30 h after ingestion than was removed by complete aspiration of the gastric contents. Determination of in vitro clearances for paraquat and diquat by hemodialysis showed that, at serum concentrations of 1-2 ppm, such as are frequently encountered in poisoning in man, toxicologically relevant quantities of herbicide cannot be removed from the body. At a concentration of 20 ppm, on the other hand, hemodialysis proved to be e…

AdultMaleParaquatHealth Toxicology and Mutagenesismedicine.medical_treatmentPharmacology toxicologyPyridinium CompoundsToxicologyDiquatchemistry.chemical_compoundParaquatRenal DialysisDiquatHumansIngestionMedicineTherapeutic IrrigationGastric Lavagebusiness.industryPoisoningdigestive oral and skin physiologyGeneral MedicineMiddle AgedHemoperfusionIntestinesPerfusionchemistryCharcoalAnesthesiaHemodialysisbusinessArchives of Toxicology
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Holocene treeline in the northern Andes (Ecuador): new evidence from soil charcoals

2006

Soil charcoals represent a record for palaeoecological studies. For the first time pedoanthracology is applied to northern Andes of Ecuador to study the Holocene treeline. The first results show that the upper treeline was lower than today in the late Pleistocene and in the Middle Holocene. A wide amount of charcoals dated ca. 13000 cal. yr. BP could be caused by fires linked to the first presence of man at these altitudes.

Andes charcoals Clusia fires forest sediments Weinmannia
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Preservation of fungi in archaeological charcoal

2010

During the analysis of wood charcoal remains from archaeological sites, it is common to find different microorganisms and different forms of degradation present in the plant tissue. However, one may encounter difficulties when attempting to identify these microorganisms and determine when their attack occurred. This paper focuses on preservation aspects related to the microorganisms in wood and demonstrates the structural changes that take place in different types of decayed wood after it was converted into charcoal. The study seeks to determine whether the microbial attack found in archaeological woods took place before the burning of the wood or after. Burning experiments were conducted u…

ArcheologyFungal attackContext (archaeology)technology industry and agriculturefood and beveragescomplex mixturesArchaeologyPlant tissueArchaeological scienceGeographyPaleoethnobotanyvisual_artPaleobotanyvisual_art.visual_art_mediumCharcoalAnthracologyJournal of Archaeological Science
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on the contrasts in the charcoal assemblage of a Late Iron Age and a Romano-British roadside settlement

2019

On the contrasts in the charcoal assemblage of a Late Iron Age and a Romano-British roadside settlement

ArcheologyGeographyRomano britishUNESCO::HISTORIAvisual_artvisual_art.visual_art_mediumAssemblage (archaeology):HISTORIA [UNESCO]CharcoalSettlement (litigation)ArchaeologyLate iron age
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The use of wood in funerary pyres: random gathering or special selection of species? Case study of three necropolises from Poland

2012

Abstract In this study, the analysis of charcoal remains from three prehistoric necropolises is presented. This botanical material formed part of funerary pyres and thus represents purposely gathered wood used for cremation ceremonies. Therefore, its anthracological analysis may indicate a special selection of wood, which may be a source of palaeoethnographic information about past rituals. However, a question remains as to whether or not the charcoal assemblages that originated from graves may also provide some palaeoecological information. In order to test both hypotheses, analysis of three Polish necropolises dating to the Bronze and the Iron Age were performed. In all charcoal assemblag…

ArcheologyVegetationengineering.materialArchaeologyPrehistoryGeographyTaxonIron AgePaleoethnobotanyvisual_artvisual_art.visual_art_mediumengineeringBronzeCharcoalAnthracologyJournal of Archaeological Science
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Vegetation changes and human action from the Neolithic to the Bronze Age (7000?4000 B.P.) in Alicante, Spain, based on charcoal analysis

1994

Charcoal analysis reveals various palaeo-ecological phases from the Neolithic to the Bronze Age. Agriculture starts about 7000 B.P. in favourable ecological conditions. Most of the charcoal spectra from sites on the coast represent thermomediterranean holm-oak forest; those from the inland mountains represent mesome-diterranean holm-oak forest. The Neolithic I Impressed Ware people were the first to clear the forest to plant their crops. This clearance of primary woodland resulted in the development of secondary vegetation of pine woods or scrub. The scrub reached its maximum during the Bell Beaker phase and Bronze Age in the Cova de les Cendres. In the Neolithic II open air sites, the perc…

Archeologybusiness.industryPaleontologyClimate changePlant ScienceWoodlandVegetationengineering.materialArchaeologyGeographyBronze AgeAgricultureBeakervisual_artvisual_art.visual_art_mediumengineeringBronzeCharcoalbusinessVegetation History and Archaeobotany
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Mid-Holocene vegetation dynamics in the Tejo River estuary based on palaeobotanical records from Ponta da Passadeira (Barreiro-Setúbal, Portugal)

2014

This paper presents the results of pollen and charcoal analyses carried out in the sedimentary formation of Ponta da Passadeira, south of the Tejo River estuary, Portugal. The data provide information regarding the evolution of the coastline and ecosystem of the estuary during the mid and late Holocene. The study focuses on a group of upright woody fossilized tree remains that, together with those identified earlier by Garcia-Amorena et al. (2007), form part of the fossil forest of Ponta da Passadeira. Eight remains were identified as Pinus pinaster, four as Pinus pinea and one as Pinus sp. Two specimens of these species were dated to 6523 and 5805 cal. a BP. Pollen analysis was undertaken …

Archeologygeographygeography.geographical_feature_categorybiologyGeologyEstuaryVegetationmedicine.disease_causebiology.organism_classificationArchaeologylaw.inventionlawvisual_artPollenvisual_art.visual_art_mediummedicinePinus pinasterSedimentary rockRadiocarbon datingPhysical geographyCharcoalEcology Evolution Behavior and SystematicsHoloceneGeologyBoreas
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