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  2. Coco Peat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/?title=Coco_Peat&redirect=no

    From other capitalisation: This is a redirect from a title with another method of capitalisation.It leads to the title in accordance with the Wikipedia naming conventions for capitalisation, or it leads to a title that is associated in some way with the conventional capitalisation of this redirect title.

  3. Coir - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Coir

    The fibrous layer of the fruit is then separated from the hard shell (manually) by driving the fruit down onto a spike to split it (dehusking). A well-seasoned husker can manually separate 2,000 coconuts per day. Machines are now available which crush the whole fruit to give the loose fibres. These machines can process up to 2,000 coconuts per ...

  4. Copra - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copra

    Coconut trees are generally spaced 9 m (30 ft) apart, allowing a density of 100–160 coconut trees per hectare. A standard tree bears around 50–80 nuts a year, and average earnings in Vanuatu (1999) were US$ 0.20 per kg (one kg equals 8 nuts)—so a farmer could earn approximately US$120 to US$320 yearly for each planted hectare.

  5. Talk:Coco peat - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Coco_peat

    No. While cocopeat is sometimes called coir by end users, cocopeat is actually the by product of coir or coconut fiber industries. Ediwill 08:45, 27 December 2010 (UTC) On the other hand I have noted many sentences in Wikipedia's Coir page where cocopeat is referred to as coir. Ediwill 02:00, 14 February 2011 (UTC)

  6. Energy density Extended Reference Table - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy_density_Extended...

    Energy densities table Storage type Specific energy (MJ/kg) Energy density (MJ/L) Peak recovery efficiency % Practical recovery efficiency % Arbitrary Antimatter ...

  7. Potassium-40 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potassium-40

    A 70 kg human body contains about 140 g of potassium, hence about 140g × 0.0117% ≈ 16.4 mg of 40 K; [7] whose decay produces about 3850 [8] to 4300 disintegrations per second continuously throughout the life of an adult person (and proportionally less in young children).

  8. Red meat could raise dementia risk, researchers claim, yet ...

    www.aol.com/news/red-meat-could-raise-dementia...

    The researchers also suggested that replacing one serving of processed red meat per day with a serving of nuts and legumes could reduce dementia risk by 19% — and that replacing it with fish ...

  9. Molality - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Molality

    The term molality is formed in analogy to molarity which is the molar concentration of a solution. The earliest known use of the intensive property molality and of its adjectival unit, the now-deprecated molal, appears to have been published by G. N. Lewis and M. Randall in the 1923 publication of Thermodynamics and the Free Energies of Chemical Substances. [3]

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