A Naval Stores Handbook Dealing with the Production of Pine Gum Or Oleoresin

A Naval Stores Handbook Dealing with the Production of Pine Gum Or Oleoresin

Author:

Publisher:

Published: 1935

Total Pages: 220

ISBN-13:

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This handbook aims to give in encyclopedic form, for ready reference, an illustrated summary to date of information on where and how pine gum, or oleoresin, is obtained from living trees with suggestions for improving methods of production. The information presented here, if applied, should result in more profitable returns from the forests, reduction of forest wastes, and improved products from the second-growth longleaf and slash pines in the Southeastern States.


Report

Report

Author: Southern Forest Experiment Station (New Orleans, La.)

Publisher:

Published: 1925

Total Pages: 632

ISBN-13:

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Crusading for Chemistry

Crusading for Chemistry

Author: Germaine M. Reed

Publisher: University of Georgia Press

Published: 2010-05-01

Total Pages: 500

ISBN-13: 0820335525

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In this biography of Charles Holmes Herty (1867–1938), Germaine M. Reed portrays the life and work of an internationally known scientist who contributed greatly to the industry of his native region and who played a significant role in the development of American chemistry. As president of the American Chemical Society, editor of its industrial journal, adviser to the Chemical Foundation, and as a private consultant, Herty promoted southern industrial development through chemistry. On a national level, he promoted military preparedness with the Wilson administration, lobbied Congress for protection of war-born chemical industries, and sought cooperation and research by business, government, and universities. In 1932, he established a pulp and paper laboratory in Savannah, Georgia, to prove that cheap, fast-growing southern pine could replace Canadian spruce in the manufacture of newsprint and white paper. As a direct result of Herty's research and his missionary-like zeal, construction of the south's first newsprint plant was begun near Lufkin, Texas, in 1938.