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Fabrics, animal, n.o.s. with oil

1 Carbon paper Coir Copra, 4.2 Cotton, 9 Cotton, dry Cotton seed, cut 1 inters, hull fibres, pulp, waste, and shavings, with animal or vegetable oil Cotton waste, oily, 4.2 Cotton, wet, 4.2 Fabrics, animal, n.o.s. with oil, 4.2 Fabrics, synthetic, n.o.s. with oil, 4.2 Fabrics, vegetable, n.o.s. with oil, 4.2 Fibres, animal, burnt, wet, or damp, 4.2 Fibres, animal, n.o.s. with oil, 4.2 Fibres, synthetic, n.o.s. with oil, [Pg.90]

Fibre is the fundamental component of textiles and paper goods. It is woven, pressed, or bonded directly into various products including/a r/c5 or undergoes the interim step of being spun into yam. Fibres are commonly characterized by having a length at least 100 times their diameter. There are four distinct fibre categories  [Pg.90]

Seeds are one source of vegetable fibres, oils, and protein. Oil-bearing seeds are mechanically squeezed in a seed expeller or the oil is extracted with a solvent leaving behind the pulp and fibre syn. seed cake, oil cake, or meal. Seed cake retains some oils as does the seed expeller. Common seed cakes include cottonseed, peanut, linseed, maize, palm, rape seed, rice bran, soy beans, and sunflower. [Pg.90]

Certain vegetable fibres are mentioned directly in the transportation regulations  [Pg.91]

There are many reasons why animal, vegetable, or mineral oils are associated with fibre products  [Pg.91]


See other pages where Fabrics, animal, n.o.s. with oil is mentioned: [Pg.90]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.2 , Pg.4 , Pg.90 ]




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