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Australian gum

From the above characteristics it will be scon, as Dr. Pereira lm remarked, that the Australian gum bears more resemblance to that of the cherry-tree than that of the acaoia. [Pg.313]

SYNS ACACIA ACACIA DEALBATA GUM ACACIA GUM ACACIA SENEGAL ACACIA SYRUP AUSTRALIAN GUM GUM ARABIC GUM OVALINE GUM SENEGAL INDIAN GUM NCI-C50748 SENEGAL GUM STARSOLNo. 1 WATTLE GUM... [Pg.97]

Synonyms Acacia farnesiana Acacia gum Acacia Senegal Acacia syrup Arabic gum Australian gum Gum Arabic Gum hashab Gum ovaline Gum Senegal Indian gum Kordofan gum Senegal gum Sudan gum Classification Water-sol. gum... [Pg.957]

Aurum 400, 450, 500] Aurum Series. See Polyimide, thermoplastic Aurum paradoxum. See Tellurium Australian gum. See Acacia Austrian cinnabar. See Lead chromate oxide Autarite. See Calcium iodate Autofroth. See Polyurethane foam Autolyzed Silk Protein] Autoiyzed Silk. See Hydrolyzed silk... [Pg.362]

A highly branched polysaccharide composed of L-Arabinose, i>Galactose, L-Rhamnose and i>Gluconic acid in an approximate 3 3 1 1 ratio. Salt-free polysaccharide formed by precipitation from an addified soln. of gum arabic. Mixed salts Gum arabic. Australian gum. Acacia gum. Wattle gum. E414. FEMA 2001... [Pg.164]

Atactic poly(acrylic acid). See Polyacrylic acid Atactic polypropylene. See Polypropylene ATH. See Aluminum hydroxide ATMP. See Aminotrimethylene phosphonic acid ATMP pentasodium salt. See Pentasodium aminotrimethylene phosphonate Australian gum. See Acacia Autolyzed yeast extract. See Bakers yeast extract Avena sativa Avena sativa protein. See Oat (Avena sativa) protein Avocadamide DEA CAS 124046-21-5... [Pg.1985]

Thii erpe is the Ve5t.Krn. Australian Tork Gum. The oil GonUinS phellandieue and Mical -ptol, and has I he follon ici( values —... [Pg.360]

Annison, G. Trimble, R. P. Topping, D. L. (1995). Feeding Australian acacia gums and gum arabic leads to non-Starch polysaccharide accumulation in the cecum of rats. Journal of Nutrition, Vol. 125, No.2, (February 1995), pp. 283-292, ISSN 0022-3166. [Pg.20]

DArcy, B., Rintoul, G. B., Rowland, C. Y., and Blackman, A. J. (1997). Composition of Australian honey extractives. 1. Norisoprenoids, monoterpenes, and other natural volatiles from blue gum (Eucalyptus leucoxylon) and yellow box (Eucalyptus melliodora) honeys. /. Agric. Food Chem. 45,1834-1843. [Pg.126]

Yip YB, Gumming RG. The association between medications and falls in Australian nursing-home residents. Med J Aust 1994 160(1) 14-18. [Pg.2576]

Eucalyptus. Cum wood Australian fever tree blue-gum tree. Dried leaves of Eucalyptus globulus Labill., Myrtoceae this is a dwarf species, known as Malee in Australia, and richest in oil of Eucalyptus. Habit. Australia, cultivated in subtropics, Europe, N. Africa and Southern U.S- Conslit. 1-3% volatile oil, tannin, resins, eucalyptic acid, rutin. [Pg.612]

Wattle gum Water-soluble or water-dispersible gum obtained from the Australian acacia tree. [Pg.1059]

Preparation 35). Mesquite gum, from a plant Prosopis juliflora and related species) common in the southwestern United States, and cherry gum are utilized. Mesquite gum consists of L-arabinose, D-galactose, and 4-0-methyl-D-glucuronic acid in combination, and cherry gum in addition has some D-xylose and D-mannose. By controlled hydrolysis most of the pentose is removed without hydrolyzing the other constituents to any great extent. The L-arabinose is then partially purified by dialysis 36) or ion-exchange procedures 37) and crystallized from ethyl alcohol. Wheat and rye bran, peach gum, Australian black wattle gum, and spent beet pulp have been utilized for the preparation of L-arabinose. [Pg.83]

Menthol (8-19) is a common cooling substance used in food products. The effect of coolness evoked through stimulation of the somatosensory system can be produced by several naturally occurring molecules, mainly derived from terpenes and sesquiterpenes. Such a molecule is (-)-isopulegol (8-319), occiuring, for example, in the essential oil of Australian lemon-scented gum (Eucalyptus citriodora, Myrtaceae) trees, which has 20% of the cooling... [Pg.666]

The Australian " grass tree gums Xmthorrhoea hastiUs and Xm-thorrhcea australis yield essential oils of highly aromatic odour. These oils smell of storax, tola, or Peru balsam, and have the following characters —... [Pg.93]

This tree is the white gum of most of the Australian Colonies, oil >has the following characters —... [Pg.354]

This tree is the Western Australian York Gum. The oil contains phellandrene and encalyptol, and has the following values —... [Pg.360]

Some Australian native plants had been associated with the treatment and/or prevention of mosquito-borne disease. There have been suggestions that the bark of tropical rainforest tree Alstonia scholaris (L.) R. Br. (dita bark) has been used as an antimalarial, but clinical trials have shown that alkaloids in the bark of this, and the closely related species Alstonia constricta F. Muell. (bit-terbark), have little antimalarial activity. Eucalyptus globulus Labill (Tasmanian blue gum) had sometimes been referred to as fever prevention tree with a belief that the use of the oil prevented malaria. Similarly, many anecdotal reports of Melaleuca quinquenervia (Cav.) S. T. Blake (broadleaved paperbark) may prevent disease by repelling mosquitoes. Unfortunately, there is no current evidence that Australian native plants provide a suitable treatment for malaria. ... [Pg.217]


See other pages where Australian gum is mentioned: [Pg.313]    [Pg.1524]    [Pg.983]    [Pg.1011]    [Pg.100]    [Pg.313]    [Pg.1524]    [Pg.983]    [Pg.1011]    [Pg.100]    [Pg.108]    [Pg.152]    [Pg.313]    [Pg.426]    [Pg.336]    [Pg.310]    [Pg.30]    [Pg.93]    [Pg.123]    [Pg.86]    [Pg.6]    [Pg.526]    [Pg.399]    [Pg.411]    [Pg.93]    [Pg.18]    [Pg.218]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.34 ]




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