enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Tar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tar

    One can produce a tar-like substance from corn stalks by heating them in a microwave oven. This process is known as pyrolysis. Tar is a dark brown or black viscous liquid of hydrocarbons and free carbon, obtained from a wide variety of organic materials through destructive distillation. Tar can be produced from coal, wood, petroleum, or peat. [1]

  3. Meconium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Meconium

    Unlike later feces, meconium is composed of materials ingested during the time the infant spends in the uterus: intestinal epithelial cells, lanugo, mucus, amniotic fluid, bile, and water. Meconium, unlike later feces, is viscous and sticky like tar – its color usually being a very dark olive green and it is almost odorless. [1]

  4. Coal tar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coal_tar

    Coal tar is a thick dark liquid which is a by-product of the production of coke and coal gas from coal. [2] [3] It is a type of creosote. It has both medical and ...

  5. List of archive formats - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_archive_formats

    tar with gzip, compress, bzip2, lzip, xz, or zstd Multiple Multiple Yes The "tarball" format combines tar archives with a file-based compression scheme (usually gzip). Commonly used for source and binary distribution on Unix-like platforms, widely available elsewhere. Xarchiver supports the .tar.zst Archive/Compression format on Unix-like ...

  6. Tar (tobacco residue) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tar_(tobacco_residue)

    Tar is occasionally referred to as an acronym for total aerosol residue, [3] a backronym coined in the mid-1960s. [4] Tar, when in the lungs, coats the cilia causing them to stop working and eventually die, causing conditions such as lung cancer as the toxic particles in tobacco smoke are no longer trapped by the cilia but enter the alveoli ...

  7. Birch bark tar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Birch_bark_tar

    Birch bark tar use as an adhesive began in the Middle Paleolithic. Neanderthals produced tar through dry distillation of birch bark as early as 200,000 years ago. [6] A 2019 study demonstrated that birch bark tar production can be a simpler, more discoverable process by directly burning birch bark under overhanging stone surfaces in open-air conditions. [7]

  8. Coal gasification - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coal_gasification

    Coal tar and coal tar sludges are frequently denser than water and are present in the environment as a dense non-aqueous phase liquid. In the UK, a number of former gasworks sites have been redeveloped for residential and other uses (including the Millennium Dome ), being seen as prime developable land within the confines of city boundaries.

  9. Fragrance extraction - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fragrance_extraction

    To a certain extent, all of these techniques tend to produce an extract with an aroma that differs from the aroma of the raw materials. Heat, chemical solvents, or exposure to oxygen in the extraction process may denature some aromatic compounds, either changing their odour character or rendering them odourless, and the proportion of each ...