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  2. Imota rice mill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Imota_rice_mill

    The rice mill in Imota is 22 hectares big, with the mill itself occupying 8.5 hectares. It is regarded as the largest mill in Africa and the third largest mill in the world. [ 4 ] The rice mill has a capacity to produce 2.8 million bags of 50 kg bags of rice yearly, while generating 1,500 direct jobs and 254,000 indirect jobs.

  3. Rice mill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rice_mill

    A group of children playing in a rice mill in Brahmanbaria, Bangladesh. Rice mill in Beaumont, Texas. A rice mill is a food-processing facility where paddy (unmilled rice) is processed by cleaning the grain, removing the hull, sorting, and packing the rice, leaving it in its final form for sale to consumers.

  4. Rice color sorting machine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rice_color_sorting_machine

    Rice processing begins in a milling plant, where the harvested grains run through a production line where the paddy is boiled, dried, de-stoned, de-husked, hulled and shelled into rice. It then is taken to the color sorter machine.

  5. Conrad Rice Mill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Conrad_Rice_Mill

    In 1912 he relocated, rebuilding the mill at its current location at 307 Ann Street in New Iberia and establishing the Conrad Rice Milling and Planting Company. He purchased additional land and moved his rice fields to the south bank of the bayou (now the location of the former Julian Conrad house (Beau Revé) at 1312 East Main St. in New Iberia.

  6. West Point Rice Mill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/West_Point_Rice_Mill

    In 1888, West Point Mill Company purchased a share of Chisolm's Mill. In 1894, West Point and Bennett's Mill combined and bought Chisolm's Mill, which was closed. Rice production continued to fall. West Point Mill was closed in 1920, and the company began to sell its assets. Around 1925, the mill's steam engine was sold to the Henry Ford Museum ...

  7. Direct seeded rice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Direct_Seeded_Rice

    Direct seeded rice (DSR) [2] [3] is a practice of sowing paddy which involves planting rice seeds directly into the field, instead of the traditional method of growing seedlings in nurseries and then transplanting them into the fields. This method significantly reduces the demand for labor, one of the major costs associated with rice farming.

  8. List of types of mill - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_types_of_mill

    VSI mill (vertical shaft impactor mill), a mill that comminutes particles of material into smaller (finer) particles by throwing them against a hard surface inside the mill; A wet mill performs wet-milling: steeps a substance in water to remove specific compounds

  9. Rice transplanter - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rice_transplanter

    This is because rice can be grown without transplanting, by simply sowing seeds on field, and farmers outside Asia prefer this fuss-free way at the expense of reduced yield. [3] A Korean walking-type rice transplanter. A common rice transplanter comprises: a seedling tray like a shed roof on which a mat-type rice nursery is set;