Guano Bibliography - Search results - Wiki Guano Bibliography
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Guano (Spanish from Quechua: wanu) is the accumulated excrement of seabirds or bats. Guano is a highly effective fertilizer due to the high content of... |
formed the United States Guano Company to exploit the guano on Howland Island, with this claim being recognised under the U.S. Guano Islands Act of 1856.... |
Phosphorus (section Bone ash and guano) guano as a fertilizer. As Garcilaso described, the Incas near the coast harvested guano. In the early 1800s Alexander von Humboldt introduced guano as... |
Midway Atoll (redirect from Bibliography of Midway Atoll) United States under the Guano Islands Act of 1856, which authorized Americans to occupy uninhabited islands temporarily to obtain guano. There is no record... |
Ducie Island (category Pacific islands claimed under the Guano Islands Act) Ducie. In 1867, a claim on the island was made under the United States's Guano Islands Act, but the claim was never bonded. The United Kingdom annexed... |
and feathers. Songbirds, parrots, and other species are popular as pets. Guano (bird excrement) is harvested for use as a fertiliser. Birds figure throughout... |
Potassium nitrate (section Bibliography) from cave walls and the accumulations of bat guano in caves. Extraction is accomplished by immersing the guano in water for a day, filtering, and harvesting... |
Economy of Peru (section Guano Era) commercialized guano exports in a deal with French businessmen and the Peruvian government, abolishing existing claims to Peruvian guano; guano was essentially... |
and the island was an important source of guano before artificial fertilisers started to be mass-produced. Guano-mining operations started in the 1860s and... |
of which occurred "shortly after the Abbotsford incident". Chicken shit Guano Liquid manure Manure spreader Plant nutrition Agriculture and Agronomy... |
(credenzas) with sheets of leather. In the morning the library is cleaned of bat guano. Mesku, Melissa (9 April 2019). "See 23 of the World's Most Enchanting Libraries"... |
Saltpetre works (section Bibliography) Salnitre" (Collbató) known since the Neolithic. In the "Cova del Rat Penat", guano (bat excrements) deposited over thousands of years became saltpeter after... |
several areas of primary monsoonal forest. Phosphate, deposited originally as guano, has been mined on the island since 1899. The first European to sight the... |
Fort Boyard (fortification) (section Bibliography) destroyed long ago). The fort was completely cleared of a huge layer of guano (50 cm thick). In 1996, artillery platforms were also restored. However... |
Uguisu no fun (category Guano) it was introduced to the Japanese by the Korean people. Koreans used the guano to remove dye from fabric, allowing them to make intricate designs on clothing... |
of bird guano have helped colonies of algae, lichens, mosses, and some shrubs and ferns establish, all of which glean nutrients from the guano. Lizards... |
Uçhisar (section Bibliography) of the valley. Inside were many niches where pigeons could roost. Pigeon guano was widely used as a fertiliser into the 1970s. Pigeon droppings were also... |
History of the Haber process (section Bibliography) exploited for their high quality guano deposits, which they exported to the United States, France and the United Kingdom. The guano-boom increased economic activity... |
of Island Records. Fleming had previously used Blackwell's name as the guano-collecting ship in Dr. No, calling it Blanche. Blackwell had given Fleming... |
Heinrich Ernst Göring (section Bibliography) David; Erichsen, Casper W. (5 August 2010). "The Iron Chancellor and the Guano King". The Kaiser's Holocaust: Germany's Forgotten Genocide and the Colonial... |