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Potash

Index Potash

Potash is some of various mined and manufactured salts that contain potassium in water-soluble form. [1]

544 relations: A. Mendelson and Son Company Building, Aaron Lopez, Abala, Ethiopia, Acron Group, Aden, Adenbüttel, Adolph Emmerling, Adolph Frank, Adolph Luetgert, Afar Region, African Potash, Agricultural Entry Act, Agriculture in the United Kingdom, Agrigento, Agrium, Akukan mine, Alberta Basin, Alexander Allan (ship owner), Alfred Des Cloizeaux, Algaculture, Alkali, Alkali soil, Allan Blakeney, Almog, Alum, Alum Shale Formation, Aluminium, Alunite, Utah, Amak Volcano, Amax Potash Ltd v Saskatchewan, American Cookery, American Potash and Chemical Company, American Trona Corporation Building, Americas Petrogas, Ammonium bicarbonate, Antioch, Nebraska, Antoine Jérôme Balard, Antoine Lavoisier, Aquaculture of giant kelp, Arab Potash, Ash (analytical chemistry), Ash (disambiguation), Ash burner, Ashdod, Ashery, Asse II mine, Aswan Dam, August 1963, Aurora mine, Austin Church, ..., Bad Hersfeld, Bad Kleinen station, Bad Salzungen station, Bages, Bal maiden, Baltic maritime trade (c. 1400–1800), Barcaldine, Queensland, Barilla, Bay of Puck, Beienrode (Königslutter), Belarus–India relations, Belarus–Malaysia relations, Belle Plaine, Saskatchewan, Benjamin Swan (Vermont), Berezniki, Bergen-Belsen concentration camp, Berlin State Library, BHP, Bill Johnston (pirate), Biochar, Biogen UK, Bittern (salt), Black Forest, Bohemian glass, Bone char, Bonfire, Bonneville Salt Flats, Boulby, Boulby Mine, Breadbasket, Bredenbury, Saskatchewan, Brigitte Hitschler, Brine mining, British Agricultural Revolution, Brome Lake, Quebec, Brunswick State Railway Company, Calciorthid, Calenberg Land, Cannizzaro reaction, Canpotex, Cargill, Carlsbad, New Mexico, Carnallite, Carvacrol, Cassadaga, New York, Cassidy Lake (New Brunswick), Cayuga–Seneca Canal, Centrosema pubescens, Ceramic glaze, Cetirizine, CF7, Chad Basin National Park, Chandler, Western Australia, Charles Adolphe Wurtz, Charles Avery Doremus, Charles Fortescue Ingersoll, Charles Tennant, Chemical industry, Chemical industry in Russia, Chemische Fabrik Kalk, Chemistry: A Volatile History, China Investment Corporation, Christmas Lake, Clabber Girl, Clarence, New York, Clément-Charles Sabrevois de Bleury, Cleveland Hills, Clovis, New Mexico, Colebrook, New Hampshire, Colluli mine, Colonial history of the United States, Colorado Governor's Mansion, Corporations based in Saskatoon, Cottonseed, Critical mineral raw materials, Crown Estate, CRU Group, Cruller, Dallol (volcano), Dallol, Ethiopia, Danakil mine, David Wilks, Dead Sea, Dead Sea products, Dead Sea Works, Death Valley Railroad, Denis Viger, Denison Mines, Deutsches Patent- und Markenamt, Dmitry Rybolovlev, Doris Reynolds, Drysalter, Early glassmaking in the United States, Economic history of the United States, Economy of Belarus, Economy of Botswana, Economy of Germany, Economy of Israel, Economy of Jordan, Economy of New Mexico, Economy of Regina, Saskatchewan, Economy of Saskatchewan, Economy of Saskatoon, Eddy County, New Mexico, Edward Steinkopff, Edwin Plowden, Baron Plowden, Elk Point Group, Emmanuil B. Chekaliuk, Energy in Ethiopia, Engineer, Eritrean Railway, Ernst Gottfried Fischer, Ernst Jünger, Esterhazy, Saskatchewan, Ferdinand Jung, Fertilizer, FGC 254 Series, Finger Lakes Railway, Fish farming, Flight and expulsion of Germans (1944–50), Flint glass, Florida, Flux (metallurgy), Forest glass, Forge welding, Franz Xaver von Baader, Freeport-McMoRan, Friedrich Weichelt, Frumoasa-Tazlău mine, Gârcina mine, Geochemistry, Geography of Belarus, Geography of Bihar, Geography of Canada, Geography of England, Geography of Eritrea, Geography of Ethiopia, Geography of Florida, Geography of France, Geography of Germany, Geography of Israel, Geography of Jordan, Geography of Peru, Geography of Saskatchewan, Geography of Scotland, Geography of Spain, Geography of the Republic of the Congo, Geography of the State of Palestine, Geography of Tibet, Geology of Eritrea, Geology of Gabon, Geology of Saskatchewan, Geology of Vietnam, George W. Stocking Jr., Germanism (linguistics), Germany, Gladmar, Glass coloring and color marking, Glass disease, Glasswort, Glossary of dyeing terms, Great Lakes, Green Spring Plantation, GrowMax Agri Corp, Gunpowder, H. Lyman Saÿen, Haifa Chemicals, Halocnemum, Halothamnus, Halothamnus glaucus, Halothamnus subaphyllus, Hambühren, Hami, Hami–Lop Nur railway, Hannoversches Strassenbahn Museum, Hans Grodotzki, Hans Luther, Harly Forest, Harold Innis, Harz, Hawsker railway station, Heber Hord House, Hemp, Hendrik Enno Boeke, Henri-Louis Duhamel du Monceau, Henry James Evans, Heringen, Highwood Mountains, Hildesheim Börde, Hilgardite, History of aluminium, History of glass, History of Palestine, History of patent law, History of Richmond Hill, Ontario, History of Saskatchewan, History of the forest in Central Europe, History of United States patent law, History of Vermont, Holungen, How Do They Do It?, Hubbardston, Massachusetts, Huy (hills), ICT Group (Russia), In situ leach, Industrial mineral, Industrial Revolution, Industry of Croatia, Intrepid Potash, Iris masia, Israel Chemicals, Israeli settlement, Italian colonial railways, Jacques Trullier, dit Lacombe, James Crooks, James Hamilton (language teacher), Jean-Joseph Trestler, Jitto Arulampalam, Johann Jacob Diesbach, John E. 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Jodrey, Royal Gold, Salsola, Salsola soda, Saltburn-by-the-Sea, Saltwater soap, Samuel Hopkins (inventor), Samuel Untermyer, Santa Cruz, Cape Verde, Saskatchewan, Saskatchewan Highway 7, Saskatoon, Scheidemann cabinet, Screen heating, SD26, Searles Valley Minerals, Sehnde, Seidlitzia rosmarinus, Shelburne, Vermont, Siberian natural resources, Silver Peak, Nevada, Sintoukola mine, Sirius Minerals, Soap, Soda bread, Soda lake, Sodium carbonate, Sodium silicate, Soil conservation, Southwestern Railroad (New Mexico), Spoil tip, Staßfurt, Stained glass, Stefan Starzyński, Stephen Miller House, Sua Pan, Suleyman Kerimov, Sulfonmethane, Surguja district, Sussex, New Brunswick, Swarovski, Swartz Creek, Michigan, Swing producer, Sylvinite, Symbols of Saskatchewan, Synnyr mine, Tabasheer, Talitsky mine, Tanning (leather), Taxation in New Mexico, Technological and industrial history of Canada, Technological and industrial history of the United States, Temperate deciduous forest, Thagone mine, The Leatherneck, The Mosaic Company, Thermopotash, Thomas Porteous (merchant), Three-phase firing, Thunder Bay Port Authority, Thuringia, Tibet Autonomous Region, Timeline of chemical element discoveries, Timeline of Montreal history, Tin-glazing, TJ Grant, Trevor Corry, Trivial name, Trona Railway, Trona, San Bernardino County, California, Turahan Bey, Tyrian purple, U.S. Patent No. 1, Udon North mine, Udon Thani, Udon Thani Province, Underground mining (soft rock), Unit train, United Gas Corporation, United States Patent and Trademark Office, United States Potash Railroad, Upstate New York, Uralkali, Urhobo people, USS Princess Matoika, Utah State Route 279, Utah-Idaho Sugar Company, Vadim Vasilyev (businessman), Vale (company), Verden–Walsrode Railway, Vitrified sand, Volga River, Wagon with opening roof, Wanon Niwat District, Wansleben am See, Wenceslas Cobergher, Wendover Cut-off, Wentworth-Nord, Quebec, Wesseln (Bad Salzdetfurth), Whitby, White Rock, British Columbia, William Armstrong Fairburn, Williston Basin, Williston, North Dakota, Wintershall, Wood ash, Wood fuel, Woodsmith Mine, Wool, World Discoveries III: Dead Sea, Wrack (seaweed), Wunstorf station, Wyatt Earp, X-Patent, Xinjiang, Yates Oil Field, 1790, 1790 in science, 1790 in the United States, 1808, 1976 in Canada, 2007–08 world food price crisis. 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A. Mendelson and Son Company Building

The A. Mendelson and Son Company Building is located on Broadway in Albany, New York, United States.

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Aaron Lopez

Aaron Lopez (1731–1782), born Duarte Lopez, was a Portuguese Jewish merchant and philanthropist.

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Abala, Ethiopia

Abala (also known as Shiket) is a town in north-eastern Ethiopia.

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Acron Group

No description.

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Aden

Aden (عدن Yemeni) is a port city in Yemen, located by the eastern approach to the Red Sea (the Gulf of Aden), some east of Bab-el-Mandeb.

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Adenbüttel

Adenbüttel is a municipality in the Gifhorn district in Lower Saxony, Germany.

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Adolph Emmerling

Adolph Emmerling (13 June 1842, Freiburg im Breisgau – 17 March 1906, Baden-Baden) was a German chemist, known for his research in the field of agricultural chemistry.

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Adolph Frank

Adolph Frank (January 20, 1834 – May 30, 1916) was a German chemist, engineer, and businessman.

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Adolph Luetgert

Adolph Louis Luetgert (December 27, 1845 – July 7, 1899) was a German-American charged with murdering his wife and dissolving her body in lye in one of his sausage vats at the A.L. Luetgert Sausage & Packing Company in 1897.

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Afar Region

The Afar Regional State (Qafar; አፋር ክልል) is one of the nine regional states (kililoch) of Ethiopia, and is the homeland of the Afar people.

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African Potash

It is focused on building a platform for the mining, production and distribution of fertiliser.

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Agricultural Entry Act

The Agricultural Entry Act allowed Federal lands containing minerals, petroleum, nitrate, phosphate, potash, oil, gas, and asphalt to be leased to private developers, as long as such deposits in specially zoned lands were left alone.

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Agriculture in the United Kingdom

Agriculture in the United Kingdom uses 69% of the country's land area, employs 1.5% of its workforce (476,000 people) and contributes 0.62% of its gross value added (£9.9 billion).

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Agrigento

Agrigento (Sicilian: Girgenti or Giurgenti) is a city on the southern coast of Sicily, Italy and capital of the province of Agrigento.

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Agrium

Agrium was a major retail supplier of agricultural products and services in North America, South America and Australia and a wholesale producer and marketer of all three major agricultural nutrients and a supplier of specialty fertilizers in North America.

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Akukan mine

The Akukan mine (Рудник Акукан) operated during 1927-1932 for the excavation of muscovite (potash mica).

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Alberta Basin

Alberta Basin is a sedimentary basin located on the eastern side of the Rocky Mountains in western Canada.

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Alexander Allan (ship owner)

Captain Alexander "Sandy" Allan (26 February 1780 – 18 March 1854), was the Scottish sea captain and businessman who founded the Allan Shipping Line in 1819.

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Alfred Des Cloizeaux

Alfred Louis Olivier Legrand Des Cloizeaux (17 October 18176 May 1897) was a French mineralogist.

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Algaculture

Algaculture is a form of aquaculture involving the farming of species of algae.

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Alkali

In chemistry, an alkali (from Arabic: al-qaly “ashes of the saltwort”) is a basic, ionic salt of an alkali metal or alkaline earth metal chemical element.

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Alkali soil

Alkali, or Alkaline, soils are clay soils with high pH (> 8.5), a poor soil structure and a low infiltration capacity.

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Allan Blakeney

Allan Emrys Blakeney (September 7, 1925April 16, 2011) was the tenth Premier of Saskatchewan from 1971 to 1982, and leader of the Saskatchewan New Democratic Party (NDP).

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Almog

Almog (אַלְמוֹג, lit. Coral) is an Israeli settlement and a kibbutz near the northwestern shores of the Dead Sea in the Jordan Rift Valley in the West Bank.

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Alum

An alum is a type of chemical compound, usually a hydrated double sulfate salt of aluminium with the general formula, where X is a monovalent cation such as potassium or ammonium.

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Alum Shale Formation

The Alum Shale Formation (also known as alum schist and alum slate) is a formation of black shale of Middle Cambrian to Tremadocian (Lower Ordovician) in age found in southern Scandinavia.

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Aluminium

Aluminium or aluminum is a chemical element with symbol Al and atomic number 13.

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Alunite, Utah

Alunite is a ghost town located some south of Marysvale, near the mouth of Cottonwood Canyon in Piute County, Utah, United States.

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Amak Volcano

Amak Volcano is a basaltic andesite stratovolcano in the Aleutian Islands of Alaska, USA, from Anchorage.

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Amax Potash Ltd v Saskatchewan

Amax Potash Ltd v Saskatchewan 2 S.C.R. 576 is a leading case of the Supreme Court of Canada on the application and role of the Constitution of Canada.

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American Cookery

American Cookery, by Amelia Simmons, is the first known cookbook written by an American, published in Hartford, Connecticut in 1796.

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American Potash and Chemical Company

American Potash and Chemical Company (sometimes abbreviated as AMPOT) was a large chemical manufacturer in the United States from the 1920s through the 1960s.

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American Trona Corporation Building

American Trona Corporation Building is an industrial building at the Port of Los Angeles in San Pedro, California.

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Americas Petrogas

Americas Petrogas Inc is a Canadian-based exploration and oil production company focused in Argentina’s Neuquén Basin where it is one of the largest land owners, with 960,000 net acres spread over 12 large blocks of which 9 blocks are located in the Vaca Muerta shale corridors. Recently, Ryder Scott Company petroleum engineers assessed the Company with 7.6 Billion BOE P50 Best Case Unrisked Prospective (Recoverable) Shale Resources (Lower Agrio, Vaca Muerta, Los Molles). Americas Petrogas was sought out by ExxonMobil and others, to partner on its shale blocks. Subsequently, Americas Petrogas entered into a joint venture with ExxonMobil on 4 of its 9 shale blocks with Americas Petrogas retaining Operatorship. Together the partners have announced 3 successful Vaca Muerta discoveries. Subsidiary GrowMax Agri Corp is exploring and developing a large phosphate and potash and carnallite fertilizer project in Northern Peru's Sechura Desert adjacent to Vale’s Bayovar surface phosphate mine. Vale’s partners in this venture include Mitsui and Mosaic.

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Ammonium bicarbonate

Ammonium bicarbonate is an inorganic compound with formula (NH4)HCO3, simplified to NH5CO3.

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Antioch, Nebraska

Antioch is a ghost town in Sheridan County, Nebraska, United States.

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Antoine Jérôme Balard

Antoine Jérôme Balard (30 September 180230 April 1876) was a French chemist and one of the discoverers of bromine.

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Antoine Lavoisier

Antoine-Laurent de Lavoisier (also Antoine Lavoisier after the French Revolution;; 26 August 17438 May 1794) CNRS (Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique) was a French nobleman and chemist who was central to the 18th-century chemical revolution and who had a large influence on both the history of chemistry and the history of biology.

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Aquaculture of giant kelp

Giant kelp, Macrocystis pyrifera, has been utilized for many years as a food source;Abbott 1996Gutierrez et al. 2006 it contains many compounds such as iodine, potassium, other minerals vitamins and carbohydrates and thus has also been used as a dietary supplement.

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Arab Potash

The Arab Potash Company (APC) is a company that is primarily involved in harvesting minerals from the Dead Sea.

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Ash (analytical chemistry)

In analytical chemistry, ashing or ash content determination is the process of mineralization for preconcentration of trace substances prior to a chemical analysis, such as chromatography, or optical analysis, such as spectroscopy.

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Ash (disambiguation)

Ash is the solid remains of fire.

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Ash burner

The job of an ash burner (Aschenbrenner) or potash burner (Pottaschbrenner) was to burn wood for industrial purposes.

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Ashdod

Ashdod (help; أَشْدُود or إِسْدُود) is the sixth-largest city and the largest port in Israel accounting for 60% of the country's imported goods.

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Ashery

An ashery is a factory that converts hardwood ashes into lye, potash, or pearlash.

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Asse II mine

The Asse II mine (Schacht Asse II) is a former salt mine used as a deep geological repository for radioactive waste in the Asse Mountains of Wolfenbüttel, Lower Saxony, Germany.

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Aswan Dam

The Aswan Dam, or more specifically since the 1960s, the Aswan High Dam, is an embankment dam built across the Nile in Aswan, Egypt, between 1960 and 1970.

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August 1963

The following events occurred in August 1963.

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Aurora mine

The Aurora mine is the largest integrated phosphate mining and chemical plant in the world.

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Austin Church

Austin Church (January 8, 1799 – August 7, 1879) was an American medical doctor and a pioneer manufacturer of bicarbonate of soda.

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Bad Hersfeld

The festival and spa town of Bad Hersfeld (Bad is "spa" in German; the Old High German name of the city was Herolfisfeld) is the district seat of the Hersfeld-Rotenburg district in northeastern Hesse, Germany, roughly 50 km southeast of Kassel.

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Bad Kleinen station

Bad Kleinen station is in the community of Bad Kleinen and is one of the oldest and most important railway stations in the German state of Mecklenburg-Vorpommern.

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Bad Salzungen station

Bad Salzungen station is the station of the town of Bad Salzungen in the German state of Thuringia.

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Bages

Bages is a comarca (county) in the center of Catalonia, Spain.

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Bal maiden

A bal maiden, from the Cornish language bal, a mine, and the English "maiden", a young or unmarried woman, was a female manual labourer working in the mining industries of Cornwall and western Devon, at the south-western extremity of Great Britain.

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Baltic maritime trade (c. 1400–1800)

Baltic maritime trade began in the late Middle Ages and would continue to develop into the early modern era.

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Barcaldine, Queensland

Barcaldine (locally) is a small town and locality in the Barcaldine Region in Central West Queensland, Australia.

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Barilla

Barilla refers to several species of salt-tolerant (halophyte) plants that, until the 19th Century, were the primary source of soda ash and hence of sodium carbonate.

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Bay of Puck

The Bay of Puck or Puck Bay (Putziger Wiek), is a shallow western branch of the Bay of Gdańsk in the southern Baltic Sea, off the shores of Gdańsk Pomerania, Poland.

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Beienrode (Königslutter)

Beienrode is a small village close to the mountain range Dorm in the Bundesland Lower Saxony, Germany.

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Belarus–India relations

Belarus-India relations are the bilateral ties between India and Belarus.

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Belarus–Malaysia relations

Belarus–Malaysia relations refers to bilateral foreign relations between the two countries, Belarus and Malaysia.

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Belle Plaine, Saskatchewan

Belle Plaine (2016 Population 85) is a village in the rural municipality of Rural Municipality of Pense No. 160, Saskatchewan, Canada.

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Benjamin Swan (Vermont)

Benjamin Swan (November 12, 1762 – April 11, 1839) was an American merchant, banker and politician.

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Berezniki

Berezniki (Березники́) is a city in Perm Krai, Russia, located on the banks of the Kama River, in the Ural Mountains.

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Bergen-Belsen concentration camp

Bergen-Belsen, or Belsen, was a Nazi concentration camp in what is today Lower Saxony in northern Germany, southwest of the town of Bergen near Celle.

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Berlin State Library

The Berlin State Library (Staatsbibliothek zu Berlin; officially abbreviated as SBB, colloquially Stabi) is a universal library in Berlin, Germany and a property of the Prussian Cultural Heritage Foundation.

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BHP

BHP, formerly known as BHP Billiton, is the trading entity of BHP Billiton Limited and BHP Billiton plc, an Anglo-Australian multinational mining, metals and petroleum dual-listed public company headquartered in Melbourne, Victoria, Australia.

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Bill Johnston (pirate)

Bill Johnston (February 1, 1782 – February 17, 1870) was a Canadian-American smuggler, river pirate, and War of 1812 privateer.

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Biochar

Biochar is charcoal used as a soil amendment.

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Biogen UK

Biogen UK Ltd is a leading UK designer, builder, owner and operator of anaerobic digestion plants based in Bedfordshire.

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Bittern (salt)

Bittern (bitterns) is a bitter-tasting solution that remains after evaporation of halite (common salt) from brines and/or seawater.

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Black Forest

The Black Forest (Schwarzwald) is a large forested mountain range in the state of Baden-Württemberg in southwest Germany.

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Bohemian glass

Bohemian glass, chiefly referred to as Bohemia crystal, is glass produced in the regions of Bohemia and Silesia, now parts of the Czech Republic.

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Bone char

Bone char (carbo animalis.) is a porous, black, granular material produced by charring animal bones.

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Bonfire

A bonfire is a large but controlled outdoor fire, used either for informal disposal of burnable waste material or as part of a celebration.

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Bonneville Salt Flats

The Bonneville Salt Flats is a densely packed salt pan in Tooele County in northwestern Utah.

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Boulby

Boulby is a village in the borough of Redcar and Cleveland and the ceremonial county of North Yorkshire, England, located within the North York Moors National Park.

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Boulby Mine

Boulby Mine is a site located just south-east of the village of Boulby, on the north-east coast of the North York Moors in Redcar and Cleveland, England.

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Breadbasket

The breadbasket of a country is a region which, because of richness of soil and/or advantageous climate, produces large quantities of wheat or other grain.

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Bredenbury, Saskatchewan

Bredenbury is a town, in the rural municipality of ''Saltcoats, No. 213'', in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan.

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Brigitte Hitschler

Brigitte Hitschler (born 1954 in Bochum, Germany) is a German artist.

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Brine mining

Brine mining is the extraction of useful materials (elements or compounds) which are naturally dissolved in brine.

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British Agricultural Revolution

The British Agricultural Revolution, or Second Agricultural Revolution, was the unprecedented increase in agricultural production in Britain due to increases in labour and land productivity between the mid-17th and late 19th centuries.

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Brome Lake, Quebec

The Town of Brome Lake (officially Lac-Brome) is a town in southern Quebec, Canada.

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Brunswick State Railway Company

The Brunswick State Railway Company (Braunschweigische Landes-Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft) or BLE was a railway company in the Duchy of Brunswick, a former German state centred on the city of Brunswick (German: Braunschweig).

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Calciorthid

Calciorthid is the taxonomic classification of soils possessing the following properties.

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Calenberg Land

The Calenberg Land (Calenberger Land) is a historic landscape southwest of Hanover in Germany, roughly formed by the countryside between the Leine and the Deister hills.

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Cannizzaro reaction

The Cannizzaro reaction, named after its discoverer Stanislao Cannizzaro, is a chemical reaction that involves the base-induced disproportionation of a non-enolizable aldehyde.

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Canpotex

Canpotex, short for Canadian Potash Exporters, is a Canadian potash exporting and marketing firm, incorporated in 1970 and operating since 1972.

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Cargill

Cargill, Incorporated is an American privately held global corporation based in Minnetonka, Minnesota, and incorporated in Wilmington, Delaware.

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Carlsbad, New Mexico

Carlsbad is a city in and the county seat of Eddy County, New Mexico, United States.

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Carnallite

Carnallite (also carnalite) is an evaporite mineral, a hydrated potassium magnesium chloride with formula KMgCl3·6(H2O).

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Carvacrol

Carvacrol, or cymophenol, C6H3CH3(OH)(C3H7), is a monoterpenoid phenol.

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Cassadaga, New York

Cassadaga is a village in Chautauqua County, New York, United States.

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Cassidy Lake (New Brunswick)

Cassidy Lake is a lake in Kings County, New Brunswick, Canada.

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Cayuga–Seneca Canal

The Cayuga–Seneca Canal is a canal in New York, United States.

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Centrosema pubescens

Centrosema pubescens, common name centro or butterfly pea, is a legume in the family Fabaceae, subfamily Faboideae, and tribe Phaseolae.

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Ceramic glaze

Ceramic glaze is an impervious layer or coating of a vitreous substance which has been fused to a ceramic body through firing.

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Cetirizine

Cetirizine, prominently marketed under the brand name Zyrtec among others, is a potent second-generation antihistamine used in the treatment of hay fever, allergies, angioedema, and urticaria.

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CF7

The CF7 is an EMD F-unit railroad locomotive that has had its streamlined carbody removed and replaced with a custom-made, "general purpose" body in order to adapt the unit for road switching duty.

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Chad Basin National Park

The Chad Basin National Park is a national park in northeastern Nigeria, in the Chad Basin, with a total area of about 2,258 km2.

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Chandler, Western Australia

Chandler is a rural locality between Merredin and Mukinbudin in the Wheatbelt region of Western Australia.

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Charles Adolphe Wurtz

Charles Adolphe Wurtz (26 November 1817 – 10 May 1884) was an Alsatian French chemist.

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Charles Avery Doremus

Charles Avery Doremus (6 September 1851 in New York City – 2 December 1925 in New York City) was a United States chemist.

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Charles Fortescue Ingersoll

Charles Fortescue Ingersoll (September 27, 1791 – August 18, 1832) was a businessman and political figure in Upper Canada.

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Charles Tennant

Charles Tennant (3 May 1768 – 1 October 1838) was a Scottish chemist and industrialist.

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Chemical industry

The chemical industry comprises the companies that produce industrial chemicals.

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Chemical industry in Russia

Russian chemical industry is a branch of Russian industry.

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Chemische Fabrik Kalk

Chemische Fabrik Kalk (CFK) (lit. Chemical Factory Kalk) was a German chemicals company based in Kalk, a city district of Cologne.

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Chemistry: A Volatile History

Chemistry: A Volatile History is a 2010 BBC documentary on the history of chemistry presented by Jim Al-Khalili.

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China Investment Corporation

China Investment Corporation (CIC) (Chinese: 中国投资有限责任公司; pinyin: zhōngguó tóuzī yǒuxiàn zérèn gōngsī) is a sovereign wealth fund responsible for managing part of the People's Republic of China's foreign exchange reserves.

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Christmas Lake

Christmas Lake is a spring-fed lake covering approximately in the western Minneapolis suburbs of Shorewood and Chanhassen.

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Clabber Girl

Clabber Girl is a brand of baking powder, baking soda, and corn starch popular in the United States.

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Clarence, New York

Clarence is a town located in the northeastern part of Erie County, New York, United States, northeast of Buffalo.

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Clément-Charles Sabrevois de Bleury

Lt.-Colonel The Hon.

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Cleveland Hills

The Cleveland Hills are a range of hills on the north-west edge of the North York Moors in North Yorkshire, England, overlooking Cleveland and Teesside.

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Clovis, New Mexico

Clovis is the county seat of Curry County, New Mexico, United States, with a population of 37,775 as of the 2010 census, and a 2014 estimated population of 39,860.

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Colebrook, New Hampshire

Colebrook is a town in Coos County, New Hampshire, United States.

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Colluli mine

The Colluli mine is a large potash mine located in southern Eritrea.

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Colonial history of the United States

The colonial history of the United States covers the history of European colonization of the Americas from the start of colonization in the early 16th century until their incorporation into the United States of America.

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Colorado Governor's Mansion

The Colorado Governor's Mansion, also known as the Cheesman-Boettcher Mansion, is a historic U.S. mansion in Denver, Colorado.

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Corporations based in Saskatoon

The Economy of Saskatoon is quite diverse.

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Cottonseed

Cottonseed is the seed of the cotton plant.

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Critical mineral raw materials

The 27 minerals and other commodities defined as "critical", "at risk", or "strategical" are necessary for a number of technologies of strategic importance; laptops and mobile phones in particular.

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Crown Estate

The Crown Estate is a collection of lands and holdings in the United Kingdom belonging to the British monarch as a corporation sole, making it the "Sovereign's public estate", which is neither government property nor part of the monarch's private estate.

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CRU Group

CRU Group is a privately owned business intelligence company.

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Cruller

A traditional cruller (or twister) is a fried pastry often made from a rectangle of dough, with a cut made in the middle that allows it to be pulled over and through itself producing twists in the sides of the pastry.

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Dallol (volcano)

Dallol is a cinder cone volcano in the Danakil Depression, northeast of the Erta Ale Range in Ethiopia.

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Dallol, Ethiopia

Dallol (Amharic: ዳሎል) is a locality in the Dallol woreda of northern Ethiopia.

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Danakil mine

The Danakil mine is a mine located in the northern Afar Region of Ethiopia.

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David Wilks

David Wilks (born September 23, 1959) is a Canadian politician and a former Member of Parliament in the House of Commons of Canada.

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Dead Sea

The Dead Sea (יָם הַמֶּלַח lit. Sea of Salt; البحر الميت The first article al- is unnecessary and usually not used.) is a salt lake bordered by Jordan to the east and Israel and Palestine to the west.

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Dead Sea products

Dead Sea products refers to cosmetic products based on materials extracted from the Dead Sea, such as salt, mud, and potash.

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Dead Sea Works

The Dead Sea Works (מפעלי ים המלח, Mif'alei Yam HaMelakh) is an Israeli potash plant in Sdom, on the Dead Sea coast of Israel.

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Death Valley Railroad

The Death Valley Railroad (DVRR) was a narrow gauge railroad that operated in California's Death Valley to carry borax with the route running from Ryan, California to the mines at Ryan C., located just east of Death Valley National Park, to Death Valley Junction, a distance of approximately 20 miles.

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Denis Viger

Denis Viger (June 6, 1741 – June 16, 1805) was a carpenter, businessman and political figure in Lower Canada.

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Denison Mines

Denison Mines Corp. is a Canadian uranium exploration, development, and production company.

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Deutsches Patent- und Markenamt

The German Patent and Trade Mark Office (Deutsches Patent- und Markenamt; abbreviation: DPMA) is the German national patent office, with headquarters in Munich, and offices in Berlin and Jena.

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Dmitry Rybolovlev

Dmitry Yevgenyevich Rybolovlev (Дмитрий Евгеньевич Рыболовлев;; born 22 November 1966) is a Russian businessman, investor, and philanthropist.

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Doris Reynolds

Doris Livesey Reynolds (also known by her married name Doris Holmes) FRSE FGS (1 July 1899 – 10 October 1985) was a British geologist, best known for her work on metasomatism in rocks and her role in the "Granite Controversy".

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Drysalter

Drysalters were dealers in a range of chemical products, including glue, varnish, dye and colourings.

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Early glassmaking in the United States

Evidence for early glassmaking in the United States has been found of glassmaking at the English settlement on Jamestown Island, Virginia.

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Economic history of the United States

The economic history of the United States is about characteristics of and important developments in the U.S. economy from colonial times to the present.

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Economy of Belarus

The economy of Belarus is world's 72nd largest economy by GDP based on purchasing power parity (PPP), which in 2017 stood at $175.9 billion, or $18,600 per capita.

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Economy of Botswana

Since gaining independence, Botswana has been one of the world’s fastest growing economies,http://www.worldbank.org/en/country/botswana/overview averaging about 5% per annum over the past decade.

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Economy of Germany

The economy of Germany is a highly developed social market economy.

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Economy of Israel

The economy of Israel is technologically advanced by global standards.

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Economy of Jordan

Jordan's GDP per capita rose by 351% in the 1970s, declined 30% in the 1980s, and rose 36% in the 1990s.

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Economy of New Mexico

Oil and gas production, tourism, and federal government spending are important drivers of New Mexico's economy.

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Economy of Regina, Saskatchewan

Regina is a city in Saskatchewan, Canada.

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Economy of Saskatchewan

The economy of Saskatchewan has been associated with agriculture resulting in the moniker "Bread Basket of Canada" and Bread Basket of the World.

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Economy of Saskatoon

The economy of Saskatoon has been associated with potash, oil and agriculture resulting in the moniker POW.

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Eddy County, New Mexico

Eddy County is a county located in the U.S. state of New Mexico.

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Edward Steinkopff

Edward Steinkopff (c1838-28 February 1906), was a German entrepreneur and art collector who lived much of his life in Britain.

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Edwin Plowden, Baron Plowden

Edwin Noel Auguste Plowden, Baron Plowden, GBE, KCB (6 January 1907 – 15 February 2001) was a British industrialist and public servant in the Treasury.

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Elk Point Group

The Elk Point Group is a stratigraphic unit of Early to Middle Devonian age in the Western Canada and Williston sedimentary basins.

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Emmanuil B. Chekaliuk

Emmanuïl Bogdanovych Chekaliuk (Емануїл Богданович Чекалюк Gnizdychev, Zhydachiv District, Lviv Oblast, May 6, 1909 – Lviv, January 5, 1990) was a Ukrainian petroleum engineer and statistical thermodynamicist.

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Energy in Ethiopia

Energy in Ethiopia is energy and electricity production, consumption, transport, exportation and importation in Ethiopia.

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Engineer

Engineers, as practitioners of engineering, are people who invent, design, analyze, build, and test machines, systems, structures and materials to fulfill objectives and requirements while considering the limitations imposed by practicality, regulation, safety, and cost.

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Eritrean Railway

The Eritrean Railway is the only railway system in Eritrea.

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Ernst Gottfried Fischer

Ernst Gottfried Fischer (17 July 1754 – 27 January 1831) was a German chemist.

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Ernst Jünger

Ernst Jünger (29 March 1895 – 17 February 1998) was a highly decorated German soldier, author, and entomologist who became publicly known for his World War I memoir Storm of Steel.

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Esterhazy, Saskatchewan

Esterhazy is a town in the southeastern portion of the province of Saskatchewan, Canada, located 83 km southeast of Yorkton along Highways 22 and 80.

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Ferdinand Jung

Ferdinand Jung (24 January 1905 – 2 December 1973) was a German Communist activist who resisted the Nazi government in the 1930s and spent a good deal of time in prisons and concentration camps.

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Fertilizer

A fertilizer (American English) or fertiliser (British English; see spelling differences) is any material of natural or synthetic origin (other than liming materials) that is applied to soils or to plant tissues to supply one or more plant nutrients essential to the growth of plants.

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FGC 254 Series

The 254 Series is a meter gauge freight diesel locomotive built for Ferrocarrils de la Generalitat de Catalunya (FGC).

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Finger Lakes Railway

The Finger Lakes Railway is a Class III railroad in the Finger Lakes region of New York.

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Fish farming

Fish farming or pisciculture involves raising fish commercially in tanks or enclosures such as fish ponds, usually for food.

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Flight and expulsion of Germans (1944–50)

During the later stages of World War II and the post-war period, German citizens and people of German ancestry fled or were expelled from various Eastern and Central European countries and sent to the remaining territory of Germany and Austria.

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Flint glass

Flint glass is optical glass that has relatively high refractive index and low Abbe number (high dispersion).

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Florida

Florida (Spanish for "land of flowers") is the southernmost contiguous state in the United States.

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Flux (metallurgy)

In metallurgy, a flux (derived from Latin fluxus meaning “flow”) is a chemical cleaning agent, flowing agent, or purifying agent.

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Forest glass

Forest glass (Waldglas in German) is late medieval glass produced in northwestern and central Europe from approximately 1000–1700 AD using wood ash and sand as the main raw materials and made in factories known as glasshouses in forest areas.

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Forge welding

Forge welding (FOW) is a solid-state welding process that joins two pieces of metal by heating them to a high temperature and then hammering them together.

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Franz Xaver von Baader

Franz von Baader (27 March 1765 – 23 May 1841), born Benedikt Franz Xaver Baader, was a German Catholic philosopher, theologian, and mining engineer.

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Freeport-McMoRan

Freeport-McMoRan Inc., (FMCG) often called Freeport, is a mining company based in the Freeport-McMoRan Center, in Phoenix, Arizona.

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Friedrich Weichelt

Friedrich Weichelt (December 1894 – November 1961) was a leading German explosives engineer.

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Frumoasa-Tazlău mine

The Frumoasa-Tazlău mine is a large potash mine located in eastern Romania in Bacău County, close to Balcani.

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Gârcina mine

The Gârcina mine is a large potash mine located in eastern Romania in Neamţ County, close to Gârcina.

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Geochemistry

Geochemistry is the science that uses the tools and principles of chemistry to explain the mechanisms behind major geological systems such as the Earth's crust and its oceans.

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Geography of Belarus

Belarus, a landlocked, generally flat country (the average elevation is above sea level) without natural borders, occupies an area of, or slightly smaller than the United Kingdom or the state of Kansas.

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Geography of Bihar

Bihar is located in the eastern region of India between latitude 24°-20'-10" N ~ 27°-31'-15" N and longitude 83°-19'-50" E ~ 88°-17'-40" E. It is an entirely land–locked state, in a subtropical region of the temperate zone.

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Geography of Canada

The geography of Canada describes the geographic features of Canada, the world's second largest country in total area.

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Geography of England

England comprises most of the central and southern two-thirds of the island of Great Britain, in addition to a number of small islands of which the largest is the Isle of Wight.

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Geography of Eritrea

Eritrea is located in the Horn of Africa and is bordered on the northeast and east by the Red Sea, on the west and northwest by Sudan, on the south by Ethiopia, and on the southeast by Djibouti.

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Geography of Ethiopia

Ethiopia is located in the Horn of Africa.

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Geography of Florida

Much of the state of Florida is situated on a peninsula between the Gulf of Mexico, the Atlantic Ocean, and the Straits of Florida.

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Geography of France

* Metropolitan France: 551,695 km.

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Geography of Germany

Germany is a country in west-central Europe, that stretches from the Alps, across the North European Plain to the North Sea and the Baltic Sea.

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Geography of Israel

The geography of Israel is very diverse, with desert conditions in the south, and snow-capped mountains in the north.

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Geography of Jordan

Jordan is situated geographically in Southwest Asia, south of Syria, west of Iraq, northwest of Saudi Arabia and east of Israel and the West Bank; politically, the area has also been referred to in the West as the Middle or Near East.

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Geography of Peru

Peru is a country on the central western coast of South America facing the Pacific Ocean.

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Geography of Saskatchewan

The geography of Saskatchewan (suskăch'uwun, –wän", săs"–, –oowun"), is unique among the provinces and territories of Canada in some respects.

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Geography of Scotland

The geography of Scotland is varied, from rural lowlands to unspoilt uplands, and from large cities to sparsely inhabited islands.

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Geography of Spain

Spain is a country located in southwestern Europe occupying most (about 85 percent) of the Iberian Peninsula and includes a small exclave inside France called Llívia as well as the Balearic Islands in the Mediterranean, the Canary Islands in the Atlantic Ocean off northwest Africa, and five places of sovereignty (plazas de soberanía) on and off the coast of North Africa: Ceuta, Melilla, Islas Chafarinas, Peñón de Alhucemas, and Peñón de Vélez de la Gomera.

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Geography of the Republic of the Congo

The Republic of the Congo is located in the western part of Central Africa.

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Geography of the State of Palestine

Geography of the State of Palestine refers to the geographic, climatic and other properties of the areas claimed by State of Palestine.

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Geography of Tibet

The geography of Tibet consists of the high mountains, lakes and rivers lying between Central, East and South Asia.

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Geology of Eritrea

The geology of Eritrea in east Africa broadly consists of Precambrian rocks in the west, Paleozoic glacial sedimentary rocks in the South and Cenozoic sediments and volcanics along the coastal zone adjoining the Red Sea.

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Geology of Gabon

Gabon is situated at the northwestern margin of the Congo Craton—a region of stable, ancient crust-- and preserves very ancient rock units across 75% of the country, with overlying sedimentary units from the Cretaceous and other more recent periods.

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Geology of Saskatchewan

The geology of Saskatchewan can be divided into two main geological regions, the Precambrian Canadian Shield and the Phanerozoic Western Canadian Sedimentary Basin.

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Geology of Vietnam

The territory of Vietnam is divided into five structural blocks: Northeast (NE), Northwest (NW), Truongson, Kon Tum and Nambo.

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George W. Stocking Jr.

George W. Stocking Jr. (December 28, 1928July 13, 2013) was a German-born American scholar noted for his scholarship on the history of anthropology.

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Germanism (linguistics)

A Germanism is a loan word or other loan element borrowed from German for use in some other language.

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Germany

Germany (Deutschland), officially the Federal Republic of Germany (Bundesrepublik Deutschland), is a sovereign state in central-western Europe.

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Gladmar

Gladmar is a dissolved village in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan located north of Highway 18 as it runs east from Highway 6 towards Lake Alma.

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Glass coloring and color marking

Glass coloring and color marking may be obtained by 1) addition of coloring ions,Bernard H. W. S. De Jong, Ruud G. C. Beerkens, Peter A. van Nijnatten: "Glass", in: "Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry"; Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, 2002, by 2) precipitation of nanometer sized colloides (so-called striking glassesBernard H. W. S. De Jong, Ruud G. C. Beerkens, Peter A. van Nijnatten: "Glass", in: "Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry"; Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, 2002, such as "gold ruby" or red "selenium ruby"),Werner Vogel: "Glass Chemistry"; Springer-Verlag Berlin and Heidelberg GmbH & Co. K; 2nd revised edition (November 1994), 3) by colored inclusions (as in milk glass and smoked glass), 4) by light scattering (as in phase separated glass), 5) by dichroic coatings (see dichroic glass), or 6) by colored coatings.

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Glass disease

Glass disease, also referred to as sick glass or glass illness, is a degradation process of glass that can result in weeping, crizzling, spalling, cracking and fragmentation.

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Glasswort

The common name glasswort came into use in the 16th century to describe plants growing in England whose ashes could be used for making soda-based (as opposed to potash-based) glass.

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Glossary of dyeing terms

Dyeing is the craft of imparting colors to textiles in loose fiber, yarn, cloth or garment form by treatment with a dye.

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Great Lakes

The Great Lakes (les Grands-Lacs), also called the Laurentian Great Lakes and the Great Lakes of North America, are a series of interconnected freshwater lakes located primarily in the upper mid-east region of North America, on the Canada–United States border, which connect to the Atlantic Ocean through the Saint Lawrence River.

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Green Spring Plantation

Green Spring Plantation in James City County about five miles (8 km) west of Williamsburg, was the 17th century plantation of one of the more popular governors of Colonial Virginia in North America, Sir William Berkeley, and his wife, Frances Culpeper Berkeley.

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GrowMax Agri Corp

GrowMax Agri Corp (GrowMax) is a subsidiary of Americas Petrogas, a Canadian-based natural resource company.

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Gunpowder

Gunpowder, also known as black powder to distinguish it from modern smokeless powder, is the earliest known chemical explosive.

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H. Lyman Saÿen

H.

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Haifa Chemicals

Haifa Chemicals Ltd. is a private international corporation which primarily manufactures Potassium Nitrate for agriculture and industry, specialty plant nutrients and food phosphates.

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Halocnemum

Halocnemum is a genus of halophytic shrubs in the Amaranthaceae family.

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Halothamnus

Halothamnus is a genus of the subfamily Salsoloideae in the family Amaranthaceae (s.l., now including Chenopodiaceae).

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Halothamnus glaucus

Halothamnus glaucus is a species of the plant genus Halothamnus, that belongs to the subfamily Salsoloideae of the family Amaranthaceae, (formerly Chenopodiaceae).

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Halothamnus subaphyllus

Halothamnus subaphyllus is a species of the plant genus Halothamnus, that belongs to the subfamily Salsoloideae within the family Amaranthaceae, (formerly Chenopodiaceae).

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Hambühren

Hambühren is a municipality in the district of Celle, in Lower Saxony, Germany.

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Hami

Hami, also known as Kumul, is a prefecture-level city in eastern Xinjiang, China.

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Hami–Lop Nur railway

Hami–Lop Nur railway or Haluo railway, is a railway in the eastern part of the Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region of China between Hami and Lop Nur.

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Hannoversches Strassenbahn Museum

The Hannoversches Strassenbahn-Museum or Hanover Tramway Museum comprises a collection of tramcars from all over Germany, and is located on the site of a former potash mine in Sehnde, southeast of the city of Hanover.

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Hans Grodotzki

Hans Grodotzki (born 4 April 1936 in Preußisch Holland, East Prussia, now Poland) was an East German long-distance runner who competed mainly in track events.

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Hans Luther

Hans Luther (10 March 1879 – 11 May 1962) was a German politician and Chancellor of Germany for 482 days in 1925 to 1926.

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Harly Forest

The Harly Forest (Harly-Wald, also Harlywald or just Harly) is a hill range up to above NN in the district of Goslar in southeastern Lower Saxony, Germany.

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Harold Innis

Harold Adams Innis (November 5, 1894 – November 8, 1952) was a Canadian professor of political economy at the University of Toronto and the author of seminal works on media, communication theory, and Canadian economic history.

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Harz

The Harz is a Mittelgebirge that has the highest elevations in Northern Germany and its rugged terrain extends across parts of Lower Saxony, Saxony-Anhalt, and Thuringia.

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Hawsker railway station

Hawsker was a railway station on the Scarborough & Whitby Railway.

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Heber Hord House

The Heber Hord House is a two-story frame house in Central City, Nebraska.

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Hemp

Hemp, or industrial hemp (from Old English hænep), typically found in the northern hemisphere, is a variety of the Cannabis sativa plant species that is grown specifically for the industrial uses of its derived products.

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Hendrik Enno Boeke

Hendrik Enno Boeke (12 September 1881, Wormerveer – 6 December 1918, Frankfurt am Main) was a Dutch mineralogist and petrographer.

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Henri-Louis Duhamel du Monceau

Henri-Louis Duhamel du Monceau (20 July 1700, Paris13 August 1782, Paris), was a French physician, naval engineer and botanist.

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Henry James Evans

Henry James Evans, commonly known as Harry Evans (1912 - 1990), was the leading exploration geologist and discoverer of the immense bauxite deposits near Weipa, on the west coast of Cape York Peninsula in northern Queensland, Australia.

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Heringen

Heringen (Werra) is a small town in Hersfeld-Rotenburg district in eastern Hesse, Germany lying right at the boundary with Thuringia.

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Highwood Mountains

The Highwood Mountains are an island range (sub-range of the Rockies entirely surrounded by prairie) which cover approximately 4,659 km² (1,799 sq mi) in north central Montana in the U.S., east of Great Falls and Benton Lake National Wildlife Refuge, at the northern end of the Lewis and Clark National Forest.

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Hildesheim Börde

The Hildesheim Börde (Hildesheimer Börde or Braunschweig-Hildesheimer Lössbörde) is a natural region, 272 km2 in area, in the northern part of Hildesheim district, which is known for its especially rich black earth loess soil.

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Hilgardite

Hilgardite is a borate mineral with the chemical formula Ca2B5O9Cl·H2O.

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History of aluminium

Aluminium is a comparatively new element in human applications.

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History of glass

The history of glass-making can be traced back to 3500 BC Asia in Mesopotamia.

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History of Palestine

The history of Palestine is the study of the past in the region of Palestine, generally defined as a geographic region in the Southern Levant between the Mediterranean Sea and the Jordan River (where Israel and Palestine are today), and various adjoining lands.

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History of patent law

The history of patents and patent law is generally considered to have started with the Venetian Statute of 1474.

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History of Richmond Hill, Ontario

The history of Richmond Hill began when the First Nations came and settled in the area.

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History of Saskatchewan

History of Saskatchewan encompasses the study of past human events and activities of the province of Saskatchewan, the middle of Canada's three prairie provinces.

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History of the forest in Central Europe

The history of the forest in Central Europe is characterised by thousands of years of exploitation by people.

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History of United States patent law

The history of United States patent law started even before the U.S. Constitution was adopted, with some state-specific patent laws.

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History of Vermont

The geologic history of Vermont begins more than a million years ago during the Cambrian and Devonian periods.

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Holungen

Holungen is a village and a former municipality in the district of Eichsfeld in Thuringia, Germany.

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How Do They Do It?

How Do They Do It? is a television series produced by Wag TV for Discovery Channel.

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Hubbardston, Massachusetts

Hubbardston is a town in Worcester County, Massachusetts, United States.

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Huy (hills)

The Huy (from the Old High German for Höhe.

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ICT Group (Russia)

The ICT Group (Группа ИСТ), also spelt IST Group, is an investment venture based in Russia.

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In situ leach

In-situ leaching (ISL), also called in-situ recovery (ISR) or solution mining, is a mining process used to recover minerals such as copper and uranium through boreholes drilled into a deposit, in situ.

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Industrial mineral

Industrial resources (minerals) are geological materials which are mined for their commercial value, which are not fuel (fuel minerals or mineral fuels) and are not sources of metals (metallic minerals) but are used in the industries based on their physical and/or chemical properties.

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Industrial Revolution

The Industrial Revolution was the transition to new manufacturing processes in the period from about 1760 to sometime between 1820 and 1840.

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Industry of Croatia

Industry of Croatia plays an important role in the country's economy.

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Intrepid Potash

Intrepid Potash, Inc., based in Denver, Colorado, is a fertilizer manufacturer.

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Iris masia

Iris masia (commonly known as the 'Barbed iris') is a species in the genus Iris, it is also in the subgenus of Limniris and in the Syriacae.

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Israel Chemicals

Israel Chemicals Ltd. (Hebrew: כימיקלים לישראל בע"מ), also known as ICL, is a multi-national manufacturing concern that develops, produces and markets fertilizers, metals and other special-purpose chemical products.

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Israeli settlement

Israeli settlements are civilian communities inhabited by Israeli citizens, almost exclusively of Jewish ethnicity, built predominantly on lands within the Palestinian territories, which Israel has militarily occupied since the 1967 Six-Day War, and partly on lands considered Syrian territory also militarily occupied by Israel since the 1967 war.

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Italian colonial railways

The Italian colonial railways started with the opening in 1888 of a short section of line in Italian Eritrea, and ended in 1943 with the loss of Italian Libya after the Allied offensive in North Africa and the destruction of the railways around Italian Tripoli.

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Jacques Trullier, dit Lacombe

Jacques Trullier, dit Lacombe (ca 1763 – December 5, 1821) was a businessman and politician in Lower Canada.

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James Crooks

James Crooks (April 15, 1778 – March 2, 1860) was a businessman and political figure in Upper Canada and Canada West.

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James Hamilton (language teacher)

James Hamilton (1769–1829) was an Irish language teacher, who introduced the "Hamiltonian system" of teaching languages.

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Jean-Joseph Trestler

Jean-Joseph Trestler (c. 1757 – December 7, 1813) was a German-born businessman, land owner and political figure in Lower Canada.

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Jitto Arulampalam

Indrajit Solomon Arulampalam (known as Jitto Arulampalam) is an Australian businessman of Sri Lankan Tamil origin.

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Johann Jacob Diesbach

Johann Jacob Diesbach was a Swiss pigment and dye producer known for first synthesizing a blue pigment known as Prussian blue (i.e. iron blue or Berlin blue).

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John E. Teeple

John Edgar Teeple (January 4, 1874 – March 23, 1931) was a chemical engineer who served as President of The Chemists' Club from 1921-1922 and received the Perkin Medal in 1927 for his work on potash during World War I. He was also an American researcher and contributor to the field of Mesoamerican studies during the first half of the 20th century.

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John Hewgill Brockelbank

John Hewgill Brockelbank (June 24, 1897 - May 30, 1977) was a politician in Saskatchewan, Canada, who served as leader of the opposition in the Legislative Assembly of Saskatchewan.

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John Stratford (entrepreneur)

John Stratford (c.1582-c.1634), of the Noble House of Stratford, was an Elizabethan and Jacobean merchant and entrepreneur, and a significant grower of tobacco in the Cotswolds.

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Joseph Priestley House

The Joseph Priestley House was the American home of 18th-century British theologian, Dissenting clergyman, natural philosopher (and discoverer of oxygen), educator, and political theorist Joseph Priestley (1733–1804) from 1798 until his death.

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Julius Curtius

Julius Curtius (7 February 1877 – 10 November 1948) was a German politician who served as Minister for Economic Affairs (from January 1926 to December 1929) and Foreign Minister of the Weimar Republic (from October/November 1929 to October 1931).

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July 31

No description.

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K+S

K+S AG (formerly Kali und Salz GmbH) is a German chemical company headquartered in Kassel.

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Kalya

Kalya (קַלְיָה) is an Israeli settlement and kibbutz in the West Bank.

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KCTV

KCTV, virtual channel 5 (UHF digital channel 24), is a CBS-affiliated television station licensed to Kansas City, Missouri, United States and also serving Kansas City, Kansas.

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Keim's process

Keim's process is a technique of fresco preparation and painting intended to maximize the lifetime of the finished work.

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Kenelm Digby

Sir Kenelm Digby (11 July 1603 – 11 June 1665) was an English courtier and diplomat.

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Kingston, Ontario

Kingston is a city in eastern Ontario, Canada.

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KOBR

KOBR is an NBC-affiliated television station licensed to Roswell, New Mexico, United States and also serving Carlsbad.

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Kotliarka

Kotliarka (Kotlyarka, Котлярка) is a village in Ukraine, located in the Popilnia Raion of the Zhytomyr Oblast (province).

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La Rochere

La Rochere is the oldest continuously working glass factory in Europe located in the forests of the Lorraine and Franche-Comte regions that provided firewood for furnaces and ferns whose ashes made the potash necessary for the glass fusion.

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Lake freighter

Lake freighters, or lakers, are bulk carrier vessels that ply the Great Lakes of North America.

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Lake Macdonald

Lake Macdonald (in Pintupi dialect, Karrkurutinyja) is an ephemeral lake that straddles the border between Western Australia and the Northern Territory.

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Lake Michigan

Lake Michigan is one of the five Great Lakes of North America and the only one located entirely within the United States.

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Laurent Leroux

Laurent Leroux (November 17, 1759 – May 26, 1855) was a fur trader, businessman and political figure in Lower Canada.

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Lazar Kaganovich

Lazar Moiseyevich Kaganovich (Ла́зарь Моисе́евич Кагано́вич; – 25 July 1991) was a Soviet politician and administrator and one of the main associates of Joseph Stalin.

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Lead glass

Lead glass, commonly called crystal, is a variety of glass in which lead replaces the calcium content of a typical potash glass.

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Leavening agent

A leaven, often called a leavening agent (and also known as a raising agent), is any one of a number of substances used in doughs and batters that cause a foaming action (gas bubbles) that lightens and softens the mixture.

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Leblanc process

The Leblanc process was an early industrial process for the production of soda ash (sodium carbonate) used throughout the 19th century, named after its inventor, Nicolas Leblanc.

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Lehrte–Nordstemmen railway

The Lehrte–Nordstemmen railway is a continuous double track, electrified main line railway in the German state of Lower Saxony.

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Lenox, Massachusetts

Lenox is a town in Berkshire County, Massachusetts, United States.

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Leonite

Leonite is a hydrated double sulfate of magnesium and potassium.

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Lignite

Lignite, often referred to as brown coal, is a soft, brown, combustible, sedimentary rock formed from naturally compressed peat.

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Lisle, New York

Lisle is a town in Broome County, New York, United States.

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List of alchemical substances

Alchemical studies produced a number of substances, which were later classified as particular chemical compounds or mixtures of compounds.

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List of Canadian provincial and territorial symbols

This is a list of the symbols of the provinces and territories of Canada.

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List of chemical element name etymologies

This is the list of etymologies for all chemical element names.

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List of commonly available chemicals

Many chemicals are commonly available in pure form.

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List of English words of Dutch origin

This is an incomplete list of Dutch expressions used in English; some are relatively common (e.g. cookie), some are comparatively rare.

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List of How It's Made episodes

How It's Made is a documentary television series that premiered on January 6, 2001 on the Discovery Channel (now known as Discovery Science in Canada, and Science in the UK and US.) The program is produced in the Canadian province of Quebec by Productions MAJ, Inc.

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List of Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monuments in the Harbor area

This is a list of Los Angeles Historic-Cultural Monuments in the Harbor area of the city of Los Angeles, California, in the United States.

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List of minerals of Pakistan

This is a list of Minerals, both Metallic and Non-metallic.

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List of mines in New Brunswick

This is a list of mines in New Brunswick, Canada.

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List of mines in Saskatchewan

This is a list of mines in Saskatchewan, Canada.

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List of railway stations in Eritrea

This article is a list of the railway stations in Eritrea.

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List of railway stations in Ukraine

These places are served by Ukrzaliznytsia.

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List of subcamps of Buchenwald

The following is a list of the forced labor subcamps of the Nazi Buchenwald concentration camp.

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List of UN numbers 1401 to 1500

The UN numbers from UN1401 to UN1500 as assigned by the United Nations Committee of Experts on the Transport of Dangerous Goods.

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Listed buildings in Bollington

Bollington is a civil parish in Cheshire East, England.

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Lop Nur

Lop Nur or Lop Nor (from a Mongolian name meaning "Lop Lake") is a former salt lake in China, now largely dried-up, located between the Taklamakan and Kumtag deserts in the southeastern portion of Xinjiang Uygur Autonomous Region in the People's Republic of China.

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Loudoun Valley

The Loudoun Valley is a small, but historically significant valley in the Blue Ridge Mountains located in Loudoun County in northwestern Virginia in the United States.

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Louis-Tancrède Bouthillier

Louis-Tancrède Bouthillier (March 1, 1796 – February 28, 1881) was Sheriff of Montreal, a Canadian officer, merchant and landowner.

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Lucas de Clercq

Lucas de Clercq (1603 – 1652), was a Dutch cloth merchant known today for his and his wife's pendant marriage portraits painted by Frans Hals.

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Maclura tinctoria

Maclura tinctoria, commonly known as old fustic or dyer's mulberry is a medium to large tree of the Neotropics, from Mexico to Argentina.

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Mangelwurzel

Mangelwurzel or mangold wurzel (from German Mangel/Mangold and Wurzel, "root"), also called mangold,Wright, Clifford A. (2001) Mediterranean Vegetables: a cook's ABC of vegetables and their preparation in Spain, France, Italy, Greece, Turkey, the Middle East, and north Africa with more than 200 authentic recipes for the home cook Boston, Massachusetts: Harvard Common Press,, mangel beet, field beet,, fodder beet and (archaic) root of scarcity is a cultivated root vegetable.

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Marl

Marl or marlstone is a calcium carbonate or lime-rich mud or mudstone which contains variable amounts of clays and silt.

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Matching, Essex

Matching is a village and civil parish in the Epping Forest district of Essex, England centred in countryside east of Harlow's modern town centre and from Old Harlow/Harlow Mills area of the town.

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Matthew Shiffner

Matthew Shiffner (c. 1690 - December 1756) was a Russian-born merchant, of German Baltic origins.

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May 1916

The following events occurred in May 1916.

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May 1934

The following events occurred in May 1934.

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Mayo, Quebec

Mayo is a municipality in the Papineau Regional County Municipality of western Quebec, located northeast of the city of Gatineau (Buckingham sector).

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Merkers Adventure Mines

Merkers Adventure Mines are a visitor attraction in Krayenberggemeinde in the Wartburgkreis district of Thuringia, Germany, owned and operated by K+S AG of Kassel.

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Messinian salinity crisis

The Messinian Salinity Crisis (MSC), also referred to as the Messinian Event, and in its latest stage as the Lago Mare event, was a geological event during which the Mediterranean Sea went into a cycle of partly or nearly complete desiccation throughout the latter part of the Messinian age of the Miocene epoch, from 5.96 to 5.33 Ma (million years ago).

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Milford pink granite

Milford pink granite, also known as Milford granite or Milford pink is a Proterozoic igneous rock located in and around the town of Milford, Massachusetts, covering an area of approximately 100 km2, as mapped by the USGS.

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Milton, Vermont

Milton is a suburb in Chittenden County, Vermont, United States.

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Mining

Mining is the extraction of valuable minerals or other geological materials from the earth, usually from an orebody, lode, vein, seam, reef or placer deposit.

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Mining Association of the United Kingdom

The Mining Association of the United Kingdom is a trade association for all kinds of mining undertaken by UK companies.

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Mining in Ethiopia

Mining is important to the economy of Ethiopia as a diversification from agriculture.

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Mining in Gabon

Gabon was the richest of the former French Equatorial African colonies in known mineral deposits.

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Mining in the Republic of the Congo

Oil and gas dominate the extraction industries of the Republic of the Congo (République du Congo), also referred to as Congo-Brazzaville.

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Mining in the United Kingdom

Mining in the United Kingdom produces a wide variety of fossil fuels, metals, and industrial minerals due to its complex geology.

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Mirror

A mirror is an object that reflects light in such a way that, for incident light in some range of wavelengths, the reflected light preserves many or most of the detailed physical characteristics of the original light, called specular reflection.

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Moab, Utah

Moab is a city on the southern edge of Grand County in eastern Utah in the western United States.

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Monte Kali (Heringen)

Monte Kali and Kalimanjaro are local colloquial names for the spoil heap or spoil tip that towers over the town of Heringen, Hesse, Germany.

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Morsleben radioactive waste repository

The repository for radioactive waste Morsleben (Endlager für radioaktive Abfälle Morsleben-ERAM) is a deep geological repository for radioactive waste in the rock salt mine Bartensleben in Morsleben, district Börde in the federal state Saxony-Anhalt, Germany.

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Moshe Novomeysky

Moshe Novomeysky (משה נובומייסקי, Моисей Абрамович Новомейский; November 25, 1873 – March 27, 1961) was an Israeli engineer and businessman.

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MV Empire Faith

Empire Faith was a CAM ship that was built in 1941 by Barclay Curle & Co, Glasgow, Renfrewshire, United Kingdom for the Ministry of War Transport (MoWT).

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Nahe mine

The Nahe mine is a large potash mine located in southern Laos in Khammouane Province.

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Nashik valley wine

Nashik valley wines are specially protected under the patent of the geographical indicator in India for the region of Nashik district in Maharashtra, India, where it is produced from several vineyards.

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National Register of Historic Places listings in Los Angeles

This is a list of the National Register of Historic Places listings in Los Angeles, California.

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Natural dye

Natural dyes are dyes or colorants derived from plants, invertebrates, or minerals.

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Natural Resources of Azerbaijan

The Azerbaijan is a country with very favorable natural conditions and rich natural resources.

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Neil Campbell (geologist)

Neil Campbell FRSC (April 27, 1914 – July 12, 1978) was a famous Canadian geologist, and is a notable within the Canadian Mining Hall of Fame.

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Neot HaKikar disaster

The Neot HaKikar disaster (Hebrew: אסון נאות הכיכר), which occurred on 30 December 1970, was until the Mount Carmel forest fire of 2010 the worst natural disaster in the history of the State of Israel.

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New Brunswick Innovation Foundation

The New Brunswick Innovation Foundation (NBIF) is an agency that seeks to promote entrepreneurship in the Canadian province of New Brunswick by making venture capital investments in startup companies and funding applied research to developing new intellectual property.

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New Ipswich, New Hampshire

New Ipswich is a town in Hillsborough County, New Hampshire, United States.

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New Mexico State Road 128

New Mexico State Road 128 (also known as NM 128) is a state road in southeastern New Mexico.

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Newel K. Whitney

Newel Kimball Whitney (February 5, 1795 – September 23, 1850, his first name being sometimes found as Newell) was a prominent member and leader in the Latter Day Saint movement and an American businessman.

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Nitre and Mining Bureau

The Confederate Nitre and Mining Bureau was a civilian government bureau to provide the Confederate States of America with needed materials such as copper, iron, lead, saltpeter, sulfur, zinc, and other metals.

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Nitrium

Nitrium may refer to.

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Northern England

Northern England, also known simply as the North, is the northern part of England, considered as a single cultural area.

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Nuclear fission product

Nuclear fission products are the atomic fragments left after a large atomic nucleus undergoes nuclear fission.

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Oak Forest Hospital of Cook County

Oak Forest Hospital of Cook County is a 600+ bed hospital located in south suburban Oak Forest, Illinois.

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Occidental Petroleum

Occidental Petroleum Corporation (often abbreviated Oxy in reference to its ticker symbol) is an American multinational petroleum and natural gas exploration and production company incorporated in Delaware and headquartered in Houston, Texas with operations in the United States, the Middle East, and Latin America.

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Oil depletion allowance

The oil depletion allowance in American (US) tax law is an allowance claimable by anyone with an economic interest in a mineral deposit or standing timber.

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Onion

The onion (Allium cepa L., from Latin cepa "onion"), also known as the bulb onion or common onion, is a vegetable that is the most widely cultivated species of the genus Allium.

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Operation Lot

Operation Lot (מִבְצָע לוֹט) was an Israeli military operation during the 1948 Arab–Israeli War.

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Orcein

Orcein, also archil, orchil, lacmus and C.I. Natural Red 28, are names for dyes extracted from several species of lichen, commonly known as "orchella weeds", found in various parts of the world.

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Orcinol

Orcinol is a natural phenolic organic compound that occurs in many species of lichens including Roccella tinctoria and Lecanora.

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Organic farming

Organic farming is an alternative agricultural system which originated early in the 20th century in reaction to rapidly changing farming practices.

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Orocobre

Orocobre Limited is a mineral resource company based in Brisbane, Australia.

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Otley

Otley is a market town and civil parish at a bridging point on the River Wharfe in the City of Leeds metropolitan borough in West Yorkshire, England.

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Out of the Darkness (1971 film)

Out of the Darkness (มันมากับความมืด, or Mun ma gub kwam mud or It Comes Out of the Darkness) is a 1971 Thai science fiction musical action drama film directed by Chatrichalerm Yukol, about an invasion by extraterrestrial beings in Thailand.

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Outline of alchemy

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to alchemy: Alchemy – A philosophical tradition recognized as protoscience, that includes the application of Hermetic principles, and practices related to mythology, religion, and spirituality.

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Outline of mining

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to mining: Mining – extraction of valuable minerals or other geological materials from the earth, usually (but not always) from an ore body, vein or (coal) seam.

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Palatinate Forest

The Palatinate Forest (Pfälzerwald), sometimes also called the Palatine Forest, is a low-mountain region in southwestern Germany, located in the Palatinate in the state of Rhineland-Palatinate.

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Pansy

The garden pansy is a type of large-flowered hybrid plant cultivated as a garden flower.

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Paradox Basin

The Paradox Basin is an asymmetric foreland basin located mostly in southeast Utah and southwest Colorado, but extending into northeast Arizona and northwest New Mexico.

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Patent

A patent is a set of exclusive rights granted by a sovereign state or intergovernmental organization to an inventor or assignee for a limited period of time in exchange for detailed public disclosure of an invention.

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Patent Act of 1790

The Patent Act of 1790 was the first patent statute passed by the federal government of the United States.

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Patent model

A patent model was a handmade miniature model no larger than 12" by 12" by 12" (approximately 30 cm by 30 cm by 30 cm) that showed how an invention works.

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Paul Lejeune-Jung

Paul Adolf Franz Lejeune-Jung, (actually Lejeune genannt Jung, meaning called Jung) (16 March 1882 in Cologne – 8 September 1944 in Berlin, executed) was a German economist, politician, syndic in the pulp industry, and resistance fighter against Adolf Hitler's Third Reich.

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Peacham, Vermont

Peacham is a town in Caledonia County, Vermont, United States.

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Penobsquis, New Brunswick

Penobsquis (2001 pop.: 1,382) is a Canadian village in New Brunswick.

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Period 2 element

A period 2 element is one of the chemical elements in the second row (or period) of the periodic table of the chemical elements.

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Peter Sailly

Peter Sailly (April 20, 1754 – March 16, 1826) was a politician and public official from Plattsburgh, New York.

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Pointe-Noire

Pointe-Noire (Ndindi) is the second largest city in the Republic of the Congo, following the capital of Brazzaville, and an autonomous department since 2004.

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Port of Ashdod

The Port of Ashdod (נמל אשדוד) is one of Israel's two main cargo ports.

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Port of Longview

The Port of Longview is a deep-water port authority located in Longview, on the Columbia River in southwest Washington, United States.

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Port of Portland (Oregon)

The Port of Portland is the port district responsible for overseeing Portland International Airport, general aviation, and marine activities in the Portland, Oregon metropolitan area in the United States, established in 1891 by the 16th Oregon Legislative Assembly.

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Port of Saint John

The Port of Saint John is a port complex that occupies of land along of waterfront of the Saint John Harbour at the mouth of the Saint John River in the city of Saint John, New Brunswick, Canada.

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Portland, Ontario

Portland is a police village and unincorporated place located in the municipal township of Rideau Lakes, United Counties of Leeds and Grenville in eastern Ontario, Canada.

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Potash (disambiguation)

Potash may refer to.

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Potash pit

Potash pits were kiln sites which were dug and lined with drystone walling for the production of potash prior to the Industrial Revolution.

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Potash works

A potash works (Aschenhaus, Aschenhütte or Potaschhütte) was a subsidiary operation of a glassworks in the Early Modern Period.

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PotashCorp

The Potash Corporation of Saskatchewan, also known as PotashCorp, was a Canadian corporation based in Saskatoon, Saskatchewan.

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Potassium

Potassium is a chemical element with symbol K (from Neo-Latin kalium) and atomic number 19.

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Potassium alum

Potassium alum, potash alum, or potassium aluminium sulfate is a chemical compound: the double sulfate of potassium and aluminium, with chemical formula KAl(SO4)2.

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Potassium bitartrate

Potassium bitartrate, also known as potassium hydrogen tartrate, with formula K C4 H5 O6, is a byproduct of winemaking.

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Potassium carbonate

Potassium carbonate (K2CO3) is a white salt, which is soluble in water (insoluble in ethanol) and forms a strongly alkaline solution.

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Potassium chloride

Potassium chloride (KCl) is a metal halide salt composed of potassium and chlorine.

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Potassium deficiency (plants)

Potassium deficiency, also known as potash deficiency, is a plant disorder that is most common on light, sandy soils, because potassium ions (K+) are highly soluble and will easily leach from soils without colloids.

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Potassium dichromate

Potassium dichromate, K2Cr2O7, is a common inorganic chemical reagent, most commonly used as an oxidizing agent in various laboratory and industrial applications. As with all hexavalent chromium compounds, it is acutely and chronically harmful to health. It is a crystalline ionic solid with a very bright, red-orange color. The salt is popular in the laboratory because it is not deliquescent, in contrast to the more industrially relevant salt sodium dichromate.Gerd Anger, Jost Halstenberg, Klaus Hochgeschwender, Christoph Scherhag, Ulrich Korallus, Herbert Knopf, Peter Schmidt, Manfred Ohlinger, "Chromium Compounds" in Ullmann's Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry, Wiley-VCH, Weinheim, 2005.

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Potassium hydroxide

Potassium hydroxide is an inorganic compound with the formula KOH, and is commonly called caustic potash.

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Potassium in biology

Potassium is an essential mineral micronutrient and is the main intracellular ion for all types of cells.

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Potassium nitrate

Potassium nitrate is a chemical compound with the chemical formula KNO3.

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Potassium oxide

Potassium oxide (2O) is an ionic compound of potassium and oxygen.

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Potter, New York

Potter is a town in Yates County, New York, in the United States.

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Prairie Evaporite Formation

The Prairie Evaporite Formation, also known as the Prairie Formation, is a geologic formation of Middle Devonian (Givetian) age that consists primarily of halite (rock salt) and other evaporite minerals.

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Project Gnome

Project Gnome was the first nuclear test of Operation Plowshare and was the first continental nuclear weapon test since Trinity to be conducted outside of the Nevada Test Site.

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Prussian blue

Prussian blue is a dark blue pigment produced by oxidation of ferrous ferrocyanide salts.

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Q-pit

Q-pits are kiln sites which were dug for the production of white coal prior to the Industrial Revolution when white coal was largely superseded by the use of coke.

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Qinghai Salt Lake Potash

Qinghai Salt Lake Potash Company Limited is the largest potash production base in China.

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Qu'Appelle River Dam

The Qu'appelle River Dam is the smaller of two embankment dams: which created Lake Diefenbaker in Saskatchewan, Canada.

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Radiation Portal Monitor

Radiation Portal Monitors (RPMs) are passive radiation detection devices used for the screening of individuals, vehicles, cargo or other vectors for detection of illicit sources such as at borders or secure facilities.

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Rail transport in Ethiopia

Rail transport in Ethiopia is done within the National Railway Network of Ethiopia, which is mostly in planning and construction stage and currently consists of four electrified standard gauge railway lines: the Addis Ababa Light Rail, the Addis Ababa–Djibouti Railway, the Awash–Weldiya Railway and the Weldiya–Mekelle Railway.

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Rail transport in Israel

Rail transport in Israel includes heavy rail (inter-city, commuter, and freight rail) as well as light rail.

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Red soil

Red soil is a type of soil that develops in a warm, temperate, moist climate under deciduous or mixed forest, having thin organic and organic-mineral layers overlying a yellowish-brown leached layer resting on an illuvium red layer.

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Regina, Saskatchewan

Regina is the capital city of the Canadian province of Saskatchewan.

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Reynoldston, New York

Reynoldston is a former settlement in Upstate New York or sometimes referred to as Northern New York.

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Rio Tinto Group

Rio Tinto Group is an Australian-British multinational and one of the world's largest metals and mining corporations.

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River Esk, North Yorkshire

The River Esk is a river in North Yorkshire, England that empties into the North Sea at Whitby after a course of around through the valley of Eskdale, named after the river itself.

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Rocanville

Rocanville is a community in Saskatchewan, Canada, and home to the largest oil can in the world.

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Rocanville mine

The Rocanville mine is a large potash mine located in southern Canada in Saskatchewan.

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Rock (geology)

Rock or stone is a natural substance, a solid aggregate of one or more minerals or mineraloids.

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Rocky Lara

Roxanne "Rocky" Lara is an attorney who formerly served on the Eddy County, New Mexico Commission.

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Room and pillar mining

Room and pillar (variant of breast stoping), also called pillar and stall, is a mining system in which the mined material is extracted across a horizontal plane, creating horizontal arrays of rooms and pillars.

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Ross Thatcher

Wilbert Ross Thatcher, (May 24, 1917 – July 22, 1971) was the ninth Premier of Saskatchewan, Canada, serving from May 2, 1964 to June 30, 1971.

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Round Lake National Natural Landmark

Round Lake National Natural Landmark lies within Green Lakes State Park, which lies a few miles east of the city of Syracuse, New York and adjoining the village of Fayetteville.

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Roy A. Jodrey

Roy A. Jodrey was a bulk carrier owned by Algoma Central Railway.

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Royal Gold

Royal Gold is a precious metals company with royalty claims on gold, silver, copper, lead and zinc at mines in over 20 countries (12 in the Americas, most of the rest spread between Africa, Western Europe and Australia).

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Salsola

Salsola is a genus of the subfamily Salsoloideae in the family Amaranthaceae.

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Salsola soda

Salsola soda, more commonly known in English as opposite-leaved saltwort, oppositeleaf Russian thistle, or barilla plant, is a small (to 0.7 m tall), annual, succulent shrub that is native to the Mediterranean Basin.

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Saltburn-by-the-Sea

Saltburn-by-the-Sea is a seaside town in North Yorkshire, England.

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Saltwater soap

Saltwater soap, also called sailors' soap, is a potassium-based soap for use with seawater.

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Samuel Hopkins (inventor)

Samuel Hopkins (December 9, 1743 – 1818) was an American inventor from Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, On July 31, 1790, he was granted the first U.S. patent, under the new U.S. patent statute just signed into law by President Washington on April 10, 1790.

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Samuel Untermyer

Samuel Untermyer (March 6, 1858 – March 16, 1940, although some sources cite March 2, 1858, and even others, June 6, 1858) was a prominent American lawyer and civic leader.

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Santa Cruz, Cape Verde

Santa Cruz is a concelho (municipality) of Cape Verde.

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Saskatchewan

Saskatchewan is a prairie and boreal province in western Canada, the only province without natural borders.

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Saskatchewan Highway 7

Saskatchewan Highway 7 is a major paved undivided provincial highway in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan, running from the Alberta border to Saskatoon.

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Saskatoon

Saskatoon is the largest city in the Canadian province of Saskatchewan.

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Scheidemann cabinet

The Scheidemann cabinet (German: Kabinett Scheidemann) was the first democratically elected Reichsregierung of the German Reich.

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Screen heating

The method of screening has been linked to the early Egyptians who used the process to separate basic minerals by using a mesh that had equal openings.

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SD26

The SD26 were EMD SD24 diesel locomotives rebuilt by the Atchison, Topeka and Santa Fe Railway between January 1973 and January 1978.

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Searles Valley Minerals

Searles Valley Minerals Inc. is a raw materials mining and production company based in Overland Park, Kansas.

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Sehnde

Sehnde is a town in Lower Saxony, Germany.

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Seidlitzia rosmarinus

Seidlitzia rosmarinus is a perennial-green desert species of saltwort that is endemic to the lower Jordan Valley along the Dead Sea, in Israel and in Jordan, as also in the Syrian desert, central Iraq (near Najaf) and in the coastal regions of Saudi-Arabia, the Bahrain Islands, Qatar and Iran, commonly known in Arabic by the names ušnān (أشنان) and šenān.

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Shelburne, Vermont

Shelburne is a town in Chittenden County, Vermont, United States.

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Siberian natural resources

Siberian natural resources refers to resources found in Russian Siberia, in the North Asian Mainland.

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Silver Peak, Nevada

Silver Peak (also Silverpeak) is an unincorporated community and census-designated place (CDP) in Esmeralda County, Nevada, United States.

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Sintoukola mine

The Sintoukola mine is a large potash mine located in southern Republic of the Congo in Kouilou Department.

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Sirius Minerals

Sirius Minerals plc is a fertilizer development company based in the United Kingdom.

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Soap

Soap is the term for a salt of a fatty acid or for a variety of cleansing and lubricating products produced from such a substance.

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Soda bread

Soda bread is a variety of quick bread traditionally made in a variety of cuisines in which sodium bicarbonate (otherwise known as "baking soda") is used as a leavening agent instead of the traditional yeast.

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Soda lake

A soda lake or alkaline lake is a lake on the strongly alkaline side of neutrality, typically with a pH value between 9 and 12.

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Sodium carbonate

Sodium carbonate, Na2CO3, (also known as washing soda, soda ash and soda crystals, and in the monohydrate form as crystal carbonate) is the water-soluble sodium salt of carbonic acid.

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Sodium silicate

Sodium silicate is a generic name for chemical compounds with the formula or ·, such as sodium metasilicate, sodium orthosilicate, and sodium pyrosilicate.

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Soil conservation

Soil conservation is the preventing of soil loss from erosion or reduced fertility caused by over usage, acidification, salinization or other chemical soil contamination.

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Southwestern Railroad (New Mexico)

The Southwestern Railroad is a Class III railroad operating since 1990, and consisted of two unconnected railroad sections in New Mexico, with no shared functions.

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Spoil tip

A spoil tip (also called a spoil bank, boney pile, gob pile, bing, batch, boney dump or pit heap) is a pile built of accumulated spoil – the overburden or other waste rock removed during coal and ore mining.

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Staßfurt

Staßfurt (Stassfurt) is a town in the Salzlandkreis district, in Saxony-Anhalt, Germany.

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Stained glass

The term stained glass can refer to coloured glass as a material or to works created from it.

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Stefan Starzyński

Stefan Bronisław Starzyński (August 19, 1893, Warsaw – between December 21 and 23, 1939) was a Polish statesman, economist, military officer and Mayor of Warsaw before and during the Siege of 1939.

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Stephen Miller House

The Stephen Miller House, also known as the Van Wyck-Miller House, is located along the NY 23 state highway in Claverack, New York, United States.

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Sua Pan

The Sua Pan or Sowa Pan is a large natural topographic depression within the Makgadikgadi region of Botswana.

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Suleyman Kerimov

Suleyman Abusaidovich Kerimov (p; Керимрин Абусаидан хва Сулейман; born March 12, 1966) is a Lezgian businessman, investor, philanthropist and politician.

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Sulfonmethane

Sulfonmethane (Sulfonomethane, Sulfonal, Acetone diethyl sulfone) is a chemical compound first synthesized by Eugen Baumann in 1888 and introduced as a hypnotic drug by Alfred Kast later on, but now superseded by newer and safer sedatives.

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Surguja district

Surguja District is a district in the northern part of the state of Chhattisgarh in India.

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Sussex, New Brunswick

Sussex (2016 population: 5,298) is a Canadian town in Kings County, New Brunswick.

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Swarovski

Swarovski is an Austrian producer of lead glass (commonly called crystal) headquartered in Wattens, Austria.

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Swartz Creek, Michigan

Swartz Creek is a city in Genesee County in the U.S. state of Michigan.

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Swing producer

Swing producer is a supplier or a close oligopolistic group of suppliers of any commodity, controlling its global deposits and possessing large spare production capacity.

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Sylvinite

Sylvinite is a sedimentary rock made of a mechanical mixture of the minerals sylvite (KCl, or potassium chloride) and halite (NaCl, or sodium chloride).

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Symbols of Saskatchewan

Saskatchewan is one of Canada's provinces, and has established several provincial symbols.

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Synnyr mine

The Synnyr mine is a large potash mine located in eastern Russia in Sakha Republic.

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Tabasheer

Tabasheer (Hindustani: तबाशीर or طباشیر) or Banslochan (बंसलोचन, بنسلوچن), also spelt as Tabachir or Tabashir, is a translucent white substance, composed mainly of silica and water with traces of lime and potash, obtained from the nodal joints of some species of bamboo.

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Talitsky mine

The Talitsky mine is a large mine located in the Perm Krai.

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Tanning (leather)

Tanned leather in Marrakesh Tanning is the process of treating skins and hides of animals to produce leather.

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Taxation in New Mexico

Taxation in New Mexico comprises the taxation programs of the U.S state of New Mexico.

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Technological and industrial history of Canada

The technological and industrial history of Canada encompasses the country's development in the areas of transportation, communication, energy, materials, public works, public services (health care), domestic/consumer and defense technologies.

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Technological and industrial history of the United States

The technological and industrial history of the United States describes the United States' emergence as one of the most technologically advanced nations in the world.

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Temperate deciduous forest

Temperate deciduous or temperate broad-leaf forests are dominated by trees that lose their leaves each year.

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Thagone mine

The Thagone mine is a large potash mine located in northern Laos in Vientiane Province.

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The Leatherneck

The Leatherneck is a 1929 American silent drama film directed by Howard Higgin.

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The Mosaic Company

The Mosaic Company is a Fortune 500 company based in Plymouth, Minnesota which mines phosphate and potash, and is the largest U.S. producer of potash and phosphate fertilizer.

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Thermopotash

ThermoPotash is a slow-release, multi-nutrient fertilizer product made from a silicate-based potash resource.

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Thomas Porteous (merchant)

Thomas Porteous (December 8, 1765 – February 2, 1830) was a merchant, seigneur and politician in Lower Canada.

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Three-phase firing

Three-phase firing (or three-step firing) or iron reduction technique is a firing technique used in ancient Greek pottery production, specifically for painted vases.

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Thunder Bay Port Authority

The Thunder Bay Port Authority was created by the Canada Marine Act, in 1998.

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Thuringia

The Free State of Thuringia (Freistaat Thüringen) is a federal state in central Germany.

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Tibet Autonomous Region

The Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR) or Xizang Autonomous Region, called Tibet or Xizang for short, is a province-level autonomous region of the People's Republic of China (PRC).

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Timeline of chemical element discoveries

The discovery of the 118 chemical elements known to exist today is presented here in chronological order.

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Timeline of Montreal history

The timeline of the history of Montreal shows the significant events in the history of Montreal that transformed it from a small fort into a big city of North America.

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Tin-glazing

Tin-glazing is the process of giving ceramic items a tin-based glaze that is white, glossy and opaque, which is normally applied to red or buff earthenware.

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TJ Grant

Timothy Jerome "TJ" Grant (born February 26, 1984) is a retired Canadian mixed martial artist who most recently competed in the Lightweight division of the Ultimate Fighting Championship.

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Trevor Corry

Sir Trevor Corry, Baron of Poland (1724 – 1 September 1780) was an Irish-born merchant and diplomat who spent many years in Danzig (now known as Gdańsk), Polish-Lithuanian Commonwealth, where he acquired a considerable fortune.

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Trivial name

In chemistry, a trivial name is a nonsystematic name for a chemical substance.

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Trona Railway

The Trona Railway is a short-line railroad owned by Searles Valley Minerals.

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Trona, San Bernardino County, California

Trona is an unincorporated community in San Bernardino County, California.

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Turahan Bey

Turahan Bey or Turakhan Beg (Turahan Bey/Beğ; Turhan Bej; Τουραχάνης, Τουραχάν μπέης or Τουραχάμπεης;PLP 29165 died in 1456) was a prominent Ottoman military commander and governor of Thessaly from 1423 until his death in 1456.

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Tyrian purple

Tyrian purple (Greek, πορφύρα, porphyra, purpura), also known as Tyrian red, Phoenician purple, royal purple, imperial purple or imperial dye, is a reddish-purple natural dye.

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U.S. Patent No. 1

U.S. Patent No.

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Udon North mine

The Udon North Mine is a large potash mine in northern Thailand in Udon Thani Province.

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Udon Thani

Udon Thani (อุดรธานี) is one of the four major cities (Khorat, Ubon Ratchathani, Udon Thani, and Khon Kaen) of the Isan region, Thailand, (known as the "big four of Isan").

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Udon Thani Province

Udon Thani (อุดรธานี) is a province (changwat) in northeast Thailand.

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Underground mining (soft rock)

Underground soft rock mining is a group of underground mining techniques used to extract coal, oil shale, potash and other minerals or geological materials from sedimentary ("soft") rocks.

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Unit train

A unit train, also called a block train or a trainload service, is a train in which all cars (wagons) carry the same commodity and are shipped from the same origin to the same destination, without being split up or stored en route.

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United Gas Corporation

United Gas Corporation was a major oil company from its inception in 1930 to its hostile takeover and subsequent forced merger with Pennzoil in 1968.

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United States Patent and Trademark Office

The United States Patent and Trademark Office (USPTO) is an agency in the U.S. Department of Commerce that issues patents to inventors and businesses for their inventions, and trademark registration for product and intellectual property identification.

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United States Potash Railroad

The United States Potash Railroad was a narrow gauge railroad built in 1931 to carry potash from the mines to the mill at Loving, New Mexico where the Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe Railroad had a spur that went out to the refinery to carry out the processed potash.

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Upstate New York

Upstate New York is the portion of the American state of New York lying north of the New York metropolitan area.

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Uralkali

Uralkali is a Russian potash fertilizer producer and exporter.

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Urhobo people

The Urhobos are people located in Southern Nigeria, near the northwestern Niger delta.

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USS Princess Matoika

USS Princess Matoika (ID-2290) was a transport ship for the United States Navy during World War I. Before the war, she was a that sailed as SS Kiautschou for the Hamburg America Line and as SS Princess Alice (sometimes spelled Prinzess Alice) for North German Lloyd.

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Utah State Route 279

State Route 279 is a state highway in the U.S. state of Utah.

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Utah-Idaho Sugar Company

The Utah-Idaho Sugar Company was a large sugar beet processing company based in Utah.

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Vadim Vasilyev (businessman)

Vadim Vasilyev (born 23 September 1965) is the Vice President of the Monégasque football club AS Monaco FC.

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Vale (company)

Vale S.A. is a Brazilian multinational corporation engaged in metals and mining and one of the largest logistics operators in Brazil.

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Verden–Walsrode Railway

The Verden–Walsrode Railway (Verden-Walsroder Eisenbahn) or VWE is a transport company with its headquarters in Verden on the River Aller in North Germany.

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Vitrified sand

Vitrified sand is sand that has been heated to a high enough temperature as to partly melt the silicon dioxide or quartz that is the main ingredient of common sand.

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Volga River

The Volga (p) is the longest river in Europe.

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Wagon with opening roof

The wagon with opening roof is a type of railway goods wagon that is, nowadays, defined and standardised by the International Union of Railways (UIC) as Class "T".

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Wanon Niwat District

Wanon Niwat (วานรนิวาส) is a district (amphoe) in the northern part of Sakon Nakhon Province, northeast Thailand.

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Wansleben am See

Wansleben am See is a village and a former municipality in the Mansfeld-Südharz district, Saxony-Anhalt, Germany.

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Wenceslas Cobergher

Wenceslas Cobergher (1560 – 23 November 1634), sometimes called Wenzel Coebergher, was a Flemish Renaissance architect, engineer, painter, antiquarian, numismatist and economist.

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Wendover Cut-off

The Wendover Cut-off, also called the Wendover Road or Wendover Route, is a two-lane highway in the western part of Tooele County in the U.S. state of Utah.

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Wentworth-Nord, Quebec

Wentworth-Nord (French for North Wentworth) is a municipality in the Laurentides region of Quebec, Canada, part of the Les Pays-d'en-Haut Regional County Municipality.

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Wesseln (Bad Salzdetfurth)

Wesseln is a village with a long history in the northern part of the borough of Bad Salzdetfurth in Lower Saxony, Germany.

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Whitby

Whitby is a seaside town, port and civil parish in the Borough of Scarborough and English county of North Yorkshire.

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White Rock, British Columbia

White Rock is a city in British Columbia, Canada, and a member municipality of Metro Vancouver.

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William Armstrong Fairburn

William Armstrong Fairburn (12 October 1876 – 1 October 1947) was a noted American author, naval architect, marine engineer, industrial executive, and chemist.

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Williston Basin

The Williston Basin is a large intracratonic sedimentary basin in eastern Montana, western North Dakota, South Dakota, and southern Saskatchewan, that is known for its rich deposits of petroleum and potash.

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Williston, North Dakota

Williston is a city in and the county seat of Williams County, North Dakota, United States.

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Wintershall

Wintershall Holding GmbH, based in Kassel, is Germany's largest crude oil and natural gas producer.

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Wood ash

Wood ash is the residue powder left after the combustion of wood, such as burning wood in a home fireplace or an industrial power plant.

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Wood fuel

Wood fuel (or fuelwood) is a fuel, such as firewood, charcoal, chips, sheets, pellets, and sawdust.

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Woodsmith Mine

Woodsmith Mine is a deep potash and polyhalite mine located near to the hamlet of Sneatonthorpe, Whitby in North Yorkshire, England.

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Wool

Wool is the textile fiber obtained from sheep and other animals, including cashmere and mohair from goats, qiviut from muskoxen, angora from rabbits, and other types of wool from camelids.

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World Discoveries III: Dead Sea

World Discoveries III: Dead Sea is a 1999 documentary that takes an in-depth look at the Dead Sea, which is a lake on the border between Israel and Jordan.

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Wrack (seaweed)

Wrack is part of the common names of several species of seaweed in the family Fucaceae.

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Wunstorf station

Wunstorf (Bahnhof Wunstorf) is a railway station located in Wunstorf, Germany.

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Wyatt Earp

Wyatt Berry Stapp Earp (March 19, 1848 – January 13, 1929) was an American Old West gambler, a deputy sheriff in Pima County, and deputy town marshal in Tombstone, Arizona Territory, who took part in the Gunfight at the O.K. Corral, during which lawmen killed three outlaw Cochise County Cowboys.

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X-Patent

The X-Patents are all the patents issued by the United States Patent and Trademark Office from July 1790 (when the first U.S. patent was issued), to July 1836.

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Xinjiang

Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region (شىنجاڭ ئۇيغۇر ئاپتونوم رايونى; SASM/GNC: Xinjang Uyĝur Aptonom Rayoni; p) is a provincial-level autonomous region of China in the northwest of the country.

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Yates Oil Field

The Yates Oil Field is a giant oil field in the Permian Basin of west Texas.

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1790

No description.

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1790 in science

The year 1790 in science and technology involved some significant events.

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1790 in the United States

Events from the year 1790 in the United States.

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1808

No description.

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1976 in Canada

Events from the year 1976 in Canada.

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2007–08 world food price crisis

World food prices increased dramatically in 2007 and the first and second quarter of 2008, creating a global crisis and causing political and economic instability and social unrest in both poor and developed nations.

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Nitrium (potash), Pearl ash, Pot ash, Potash deposits, Potash fertilizer, Potash salt, Potashes, Potassium fertilizer, 🝘.

References

[1] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Potash

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