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The house was covered in burnt lime to avoid fingerprints.
In the early Neolithic period, people used vessels made of stone, gyps and burnt lime.
This colour was made by adding India ink to burnt lime and crushed oyster shell.
Other goods carried include roadstone, timber and burnt lime.
It was built of coral blocks and paintedwith burnt lime wash to a dazzling white.
Lime - acts as a binder and contains particles of raw limestone and over burnt lime.
There was a haze over the target area-steam and dust, burnt lime and burn- ing bodies.
It was once a busy interchange with the Peak Forest Tramway, for the transport of limestone and burnt lime.
Stephenson saw that he could use this limestone and coal to make burnt lime for agricultural use and then use his railway to move it.
Calcium oxide (CaO), commonly known as quicklime or burnt lime, is a widely used chemical compound.
Otherwise it most commonly means slaked lime, as the more dangerous form is usually described more specifically as quicklime or burnt lime.
The light-coloured lime of the White Jurassic was a popular building material for houses (burnt lime) and for road construction (rubble).
Calcium oxide (burnt lime) and calcium hydroxide (hydrated lime) give the same end result, since an excess of water is used in the preparation.
Fluxes (burnt lime or dolomite) are fed into the vessel to form slag, which absorbs impurities of the steelmaking process.
A Rumford furnace is a kiln for the industrial scale production in the 19th century of calcium oxide, popularly known as quicklime or burnt lime.
Pig iron also came down from the Adirondacks, and burnt lime from the foothills of the Green Mountains across the river in Washington County.
It contains 2 vertical pot draw kilns each holding up to 300 tons each, which could produce up to 40 tons of burnt lime a day.
Other amendments that can be used to increase the pH of soil include wood ash, industrial CaO (burnt lime), and oyster shells.
Agriculture based industry, timber extraction, charcoal production, burnt lime production, apiculture (bee keeping), and animal husbandry are other economies.
The use of fire to produce burnt lime, which was also used for the hafting of implements, predates the use of pottery by almost a thousand years.
The remaining limestone was put into lime kilns at Bugsworth where it was converted into quick lime (or burnt lime).
Kilns such as these were built for convenience against a hillside so that the raw materials could be fed in from the top and the burnt lime taken out at the bottom.
In the past, countless lime kilns all over countries, such as Britain, burnt lime stones of varying qualities - many of these lime stones containing impurities.
Burnt Lime Products and Social Implications in the Pre-Pottery Neolithic B Villages of the Near East.
The Galong deposit was first mined in 1885 with significant mining activity in the 1920s producing burnt lime or quicklime, which is used in the production of cement.