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Hemp seeds

Hanf-dichtung, /. hemp packing, -faden, m. hemp fiber hemp twine, -korn, n. hemp-seed. [Pg.204]

Galeopsie). -ol, n. hemp (seed) oil. -papier, n. hemp paper, -samen, n., -saat, /. hemp-seed. -saure, /. linoleic acid, -sell, n. hemp rope, hemp cord. [Pg.204]

Linolenic acid Linseed oil, hemp seed oil, perilla oil Holarrihidine holarrhena antidy, senterica... [Pg.434]

Cotton seed, palm kernels, peanut, rapeseed, soya bean, sunflower, hemp seed, gold of pleasure, linseed, mustard seed, pumpkin seed, safflower, soya beans... [Pg.172]

These hallucinogenic properties were recognized when Cannabis was administered in a variety of ways. The Scythians threw hemp seeds on hot rocks... [Pg.12]

And now for the vapour-bath. On a framework made up of three sticks, meeting at the top, they stretch pieces of woollen cloth, taking care to get the jams as perfect as they can, and inside this little tent, they place a dish with red-hot stones on it. They then take some hemp seed, enter the tent and throw the seed onto the hot stones. [Pg.325]

Edestin from Hemp Seed. (Abderhalden Kossel and Patten Schulze and Winterstein.) Edestin from Cotton Seed. (Abderhalden and Rostoski.) Edestin from Sunflower Seed. (Abderhalden and Reinbold.) Cryst. Globulin from Pumpkin Seed. (Abderhalden and Berghausen.) Cryst. Globulin from Squash Seed. (Osborne and Clapp Osborne and Gilbert.) Excelsin from Brazil Nut. (Osborne and Clapp.)... [Pg.21]

CS059 Romanenko, V. 1. Changes in the physical and biochemical properties of hemp seeds during storage. Tr Vses Nauchno Issled Inst Lum Kuit 1974 35 80. [Pg.96]

Lawi-Berger, C. and I. Kapetanidis. Chemotaxonomic study of cannabis (Cannabaceae). Part 2. Quantitative analysis of fatty acids in hemp seeds of Cannabis sativa L. Pharm Acta Helv 1983 58(3) 79-81. [Pg.99]

In driving-related court cases, it is often difficult to prove impairment, since even if the marijuana was used hours or days earlier, the metabolites are still being released from fat cells and excreted in urine. Defense arguments in cases with positive random urine tests include use of hemp seed oil, unknowingly ingesting marijuana-laced foods, or exposure to secondhand smoke. The latter argument is very dependent on the concentration of metabolite in urine. [Pg.60]

Bosy, T.Z., and K.A. Cole. Consumption and Quantitation of delta-9-Tetrahydrocannabinol in Commercially Available Hemp Seed Oil Products Journal of Analytical Toxicology 24 (2000) 562-566. [Pg.133]

In France, and on the Continent, olive oil is extensively used in soap-making and for soft soaps, hemp-seed oil is highly valued. [Pg.869]

Soft Soap.—This variety of soap differs in many essential particulars from those already described. The alkali need in its production is potassa exclusively, and the oil, either in whole or in part, a drying oil, as that of hemp seed, popples, et cetera, or fish oil, as whale or seal oil. The theory of the reaction of potassa upon fateand oils is precisely the same as in the case of soda. Soaps with potassa base are, however, manufactured on an entirely different system to those of soda or hard soaps. In tbe latter, the soap is withdrawn from the lio when only a portion of the ojl lias been sapomfiod, and fresh lies are added nntil saponification is complete. [Pg.883]

The hemp plant, Cannabis sativa, has been known for its commercial use as a source of hemp for the manufacture of rope, sacking and so on for well over 2000 years. The hemp seeds have also been used as a source of oil, as an animal feed and as a form of soap, while the leaves were first used in China because of the psychoactive ingredients they contained. From China, the... [Pg.410]

Linolenic acid is always obtained from natural sources, chiefly from the oils of various seeds, such as hemp seed,1 walnut,2 poppy seed,2 cotton seed,2 and, best of all, linseed.3, 4 The crude acid has been purified via the solid hexabromide, either directly, 5> 6... [Pg.103]

Hemp (Marijuana, Cannabis sativa). Hemp seed oil has an interesting fatty acid composition. One report gives the followimg values palmitic (4—9%), stearic (2-4%), oleic (8-15%), linoleic (53-60%), a-linolenic (15-25%), y-linolenic (0-5%), and stearidonic acid (0-3%). The oil is being used in cosmetic formulations (116). Evidence from a study in Finland indicates that dietary consumption of hemp seed oil leads to increased levels of y-linolenic acid in blood serum (117). The growing of hemp is banned in the United States, and therefore, hemp seed oil must be imported into that country (118-119). [Pg.281]


See other pages where Hemp seeds is mentioned: [Pg.1075]    [Pg.7]    [Pg.55]    [Pg.71]    [Pg.1344]    [Pg.133]    [Pg.135]    [Pg.120]    [Pg.91]    [Pg.59]    [Pg.63]    [Pg.278]    [Pg.605]    [Pg.622]    [Pg.630]    [Pg.869]    [Pg.565]    [Pg.678]    [Pg.638]    [Pg.768]    [Pg.58]    [Pg.231]    [Pg.966]    [Pg.141]    [Pg.93]    [Pg.253]    [Pg.253]    [Pg.253]    [Pg.306]    [Pg.274]    [Pg.678]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.202 ]

See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.37 ]




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