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| Results 1 - 10 of about 128 for the
Glassware
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| Exact Match: Glassware |
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Illustration of a beaker A beaker is a type of laboratory glassware which consistsof a cylindrical cup with a notch on the top to allow for the pouringof liquids. They are about as wide as they are tall. This makes beakers very stable and easy to handle. They may be made of plastic , glass , or Pyrex ® . Some beakers have graduated markings, or calibrations , to allow an easy... http://www.allaboutall.info/article/Beaker (glassware)
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Laboratory glassware refers to a variety of equipment, traditionally made of glass , used for scientific experiments in chemistry and biology . Some of the equipment is now made of plastic for cost and convenience reasons, but glass is still used for some applications because it is relatively inert , transparent, and relatively easy to customize. Borosilicate glasses such as Pyrex... http://www.allaboutall.info/article/Laboratory glassware
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Glass stemware Drinkware is a general term for the class of vessels from which people drink. Glassware is a subset of drinkware made from glass. Stemware is a subcategory of drinkware that stand on stems. A glass is a drinking vessel made from glass . Glasses are often clear, but are sometimes coloured, or printed or etched with decorations. List of drinkware... http://www.allaboutall.info/article/Drinkware
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...also 3 Accrington's football teams 4 Famous sons and daughters 5 Geography Tiffany Glass The Haworth Art Gallery in Accrington contains an outstanding collection of Tiffany glassware presented to the town by Joseph Briggs, an Accrington man who had joined Tiffany’s in the late 19th century and eventually became art director and assistant manager. The Art Nouveau vases are... http://www.allaboutall.info/article/Accrington
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The references in this article would be clearer with a different style of citation and footnoting . More information about this request may have been added to the talk page. ... 4, 2002. ^ Edwards, Steven: UN Blasts Canada for Hypocrisy on Drug Trade , The National Post, Feb. 23, 2000. ^ United Nations press release , Feb. 15, 2001. http://www.allaboutall.info/article/Convention on Psychotropic Substances
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...nuclear catalysis when hydrogen is absorbed by finely divided palladium at room temperature. These authors later acknowledged that the helium they measured was due to background from the air or the glassware they used. In 1927 , Swedish scientist John Tandberg said that he had fused hydrogen into helium in an electrolytic cell with palladium electrodes. On the basis of his work he applied... http://www.allaboutall.info/article/Cold fusion
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.... Chromite is used to make molds for the firing of bricks . Chromium salts are used in the tanning of leather . Potassium dichromate is a chemical reagent , used in cleaning laboratory glassware and as a titrating agent. It is also used as a mordant (i.e. a fixing agent) for dyes in fabric. Chromium(IV) oxide (CrO 2 ) is used to manufacture magnetic tape , where its higher coercivity... http://www.allaboutall.info/article/Chromium
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...that each cast piece emerged from the mold with the image already on the surface of the glass. This reduced manufacturing costs and, combined with a wider use of colored glass, led to cheap popular glassware in the 1930s , which later became known as Depression glass. Glass tools Since glass is strong and unreactive, it is a very useful material. Many household objects are made of glass. Drinking... http://www.allaboutall.info/article/Glass
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...displayed large contemporary American works of art loaned from museums in the Jacqueline Kennedy Garden on a rotating basis. In the White House , Clinton placed the donated handicrafts ( pottery , glassware , etc.) of contemporary American artisans on rotating display in the state rooms. She oversaw the restoration of the Blue Room on the state floor, and the redecoration of the Treaty Room into... http://www.allaboutall.info/article/Hillary Rodham Clinton
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...skins, timber, wool, corn and slaves. Foreign investment created a vigorous domestic market and imports were often of exotic Continental items such as fine pottery, olive oil, lavastone querns , glassware, garum and fruit. Mineral extraction sites such as the Dolaucothi gold mine, the Wealden ironworking zone and the lead and silver mines of the Mendip Hills seem to have been private... http://www.allaboutall.info/article/Roman Britain
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Also helps finding: glasswares, glasswar, lassware, gassware, glssware, glasware, glasware, glassare, glasswre, glasswae, glasswar, rlassware, tlassware, ylassware, flassware |
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