many grains

  • 31Gramineae — Gra·min·eae (grə minґe e) the grass family, a large family of plants that have hollow stems and slender leaves. Besides the plants popularly called grass, it includes food plants such as many grains and sugar cane …

    Medical dictionary

  • 32Claviceps purpurea — noun a fungus that infects various cereal plants forming compact black masses of branching filaments that replace many grains of the plant; source of medicinally important alkaloids and of lysergic acid • Syn: ↑ergot • Derivationally related… …

    Useful english dictionary

  • 33Glossary of botanical terms — Many of the terms used in Wikipedia glossaries (often most) are already defined and explained within Wikipedia itself. However, lists like the following indicate where new articles need to be written and are also useful for looking up and… …

    Wikipedia

  • 34Staple food — Grains Various types of …

    Wikipedia

  • 35Fish toxins — Many hunter gatherer cultures use poisonous plants to stun fish so that they become easy to collect by hand. Some of these poisons paralyse the fish, others are thought to work by removing oxygen from the water. [… …

    Wikipedia

  • 36MATHEMATICS —    Many of the practices and concepts of mathematics were first developed in Mesopotamia, where professional numeracy predated literacy. In the Chalcolithic period, counters and tokens facilitated the administration before the use of archaic… …

    Historical Dictionary of Mesopotamia

  • 37Traditional fishing tackle — Many of these are mainly made up of bamboo at Mendha and from synthetic material at Khursa. Following types of indigenous fishing instruments has been documented from both villages,DhiriReported from Mendha, this is a rectangular trap of bamboo… …

    Wikipedia

  • 38Agriculture and Food Supplies — ▪ 2007 Introduction Bird flu reached Europe and Africa, and concerns over BSE continued to disrupt trade in beef. An international vault for seeds was under construction on an Arctic island. Stocks of important food fish species were reported… …

    Universalium

  • 39sedimentary rock — Rock formed at or near the Earth s surface by the accumulation and lithification of fragments of preexisting rocks or by precipitation from solution at normal surface temperatures. Sedimentary rocks can be formed only where sediments are… …

    Universalium

  • 40dating — I In geology and archaeology, the process of determining an object s or event s place within a chronological scheme. Scientists may use either relative dating, in which items are sequenced on the basis of stratigraphic clues (see stratigraphy) or …

    Universalium