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  2. Terraria - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terraria

    Terraria is a 2D sandbox game with gameplay that revolves around exploration, building, crafting, combat, survival, and mining, playable in both single-player and multiplayer modes. [ 3 ] [ 4 ] The game has a 2D sprite tile-based graphical style reminiscent of the 16-bit sprites found on the Super NES . [ 4 ]

  3. Glass bottle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass_bottle

    Glass bottles and glass jars are found in many households worldwide. The first glass bottles were produced in Mesopotamia around 1500 B.C., and in the Roman Empire in around 1 AD. [1] America's glass bottle and glass jar industry was born in the early 1600s, when settlers in Jamestown built the first glass-melting furnace.

  4. Terrarium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Terrarium

    A terrarium (pl. terraria or terrariums) is a glass container containing soil and plants in an environment different from the surroundings. It is usually a sealable container that can be opened for maintenance or to access the plants inside; however, terraria can also be open to the atmosphere. Terraria are often kept as ornamental items.

  5. Unguentarium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unguentarium

    An unguentarium (pl.: unguentaria), also referred to as balsamarium (pl.: balsamarii), lacrimarium (pl.: lacrimarii) or tears vessel, [1] is a small ceramic or glass bottle found frequently by archaeologists at Hellenistic and Roman sites, especially in cemeteries. [2]

  6. Codd-neck bottle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Codd-neck_bottle

    The bottle was designed and manufactured with thick glass to withstand internal pressure, and a chamber to enclose a marble and a rubber washer in the neck. The bottles are filled upside down, and pressure of the gas in the bottle forces the marble against the washer, sealing in the carbonation.

  7. Witch bottle - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Witch_bottle

    Early nineteenth-century witch bottle from Lincolnshire, England, and its contents. A white witch or folk healer would prepare the witch's bottle. Historically, the witch's bottle contained the victim's (the person who believed they had a spell put on them, for example) urine, hair or nail clippings, or red thread from sprite traps.

  8. Glass - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass

    The refractive, reflective and transmission properties of glass make glass suitable for manufacturing optical lenses, prisms, and optoelectronics materials. Extruded glass fibres have applications as optical fibres in communications networks, thermal insulating material when matted as glass wool to trap air, or in glass-fibre reinforced plastic ...

  9. Glass recycling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Glass_recycling

    Bottles in different colours Mixed colour glass cullet Public glass waste collection point for different colours of containers. Glass recycling is the processing of waste glass into usable products. [1] Glass that is crushed or imploded and ready to be remelted is called cullet. [2] There are two types of cullet: internal and external.