Cynthia Harnett has written:
'The sign of the Green Falcon' -- subject(s): Fiction, History, Juvenile fiction
'The Wool-pack'
'The Load of Unicorn'
'The cargo of the Madalena' -- subject(s): Fiction, History, Juvenile fiction, Mystery and detective stories, Printing
'Ring out Bow bells!' -- subject(s): Children's stories
'The wool-pack'
'A fifteenth century wool merchant'
'Nicholas and the wool-pack' -- subject(s): Wool industry, Fiction
'Nicholas and the wool-pack' -- subject(s): Wool industry, Fiction
'The Wool-Pack'
1 answer
Julie Parker has written:
'All about wool' -- subject(s): Wool, Wool fabrics
1 answer
George S. LeCouteur has written:
'Wool! modern myths, new horizons' -- subject(s): Wool industry
1 answer
Wool can be crafted into paintings and beds. Otherwise, it can be used as a building material. Or with wool dyes you can make pixel art.
3 answers
When a balloon is rubbed with a wool cloth, the electrons from the atoms of the wool cloth enter the atoms of the balloon and thus, the number of electrons in the atoms of balloon becomes more than the number of protons. Hence, there is a net negative charge in the balloon, whereas in the wool cloth the number of electrons in its atoms become less than the number of protons, hence there is a net positive charge on the wool cloth.
1 answer
It´s your shed, you can call it whatever you wish.
But technically a wool shed is where you store the wool and a sharing shed is where you shear the lambs.
1 answer
James Paul Warburg has written:
'Wool and wool manufacture' -- subject(s): Wool industry, Woolen and worsted manufacture
1 answer
John Luccock has written:
'The nature and properties of wool' -- subject(s): Sheep, Wool
1 answer
Fred Moylan has written:
'U-turn for wool' -- subject(s): Wool industry
1 answer
A. Doberczak has written:
'Cotton, bast, and wool fibers' -- subject(s): Bast, Cotton, Wool
1 answer
Goats are raised for a number of things.
They can be raised for goat milk, pets, lawn mowers or wool.
They certainly can be raised for wool, but they are raised more for milk.
1 answer
James W. Christie has written:
'Grading wool' -- subject(s): Wool, Grading
1 answer
One can purchase Merino wool socks from a number of retailers. They can be purchased from Amazon, Go Outdoors, Marks and Spencer, Treckwear and Smart Wool.
1 answer
When a balloon is rubbed with a wool cloth, electrons are transferred from the wool to the balloon, giving the balloon a surplus of electrons, making it negatively charged. Wool has a higher affinity for electrons compared to the balloon material, which results in the transfer of electrons and the creation of a negative charge on the balloon.
3 answers
T. B. Harmsworth has written:
'Sheep and wool classing' -- subject(s): Sheep, Wool
1 answer
H. N. Batham has written:
'Manufacture of pine wool' -- subject(s): Pine wool
1 answer
Fe(s) + O2(g) --> FeO(s)
You have to balance the equation so: 2Fe(s) + O2(g) --> 2FeO(s)
2 answers
Australia is the number one producer of wool.
2 answers
Jane Court has written:
'Sheep farming for meat & wool' -- subject(s): Sheep, Mutton, Wool industry, Breeding, Meat industry and trade, Wool, Lamb (Meat)
1 answer
William Dermot Darby has written:
'Wool' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Wool trade and industry
1 answer
Grace Rogers Cooper has written:
'The Scholfield wool-carding machines' -- subject(s): Wool-carding
1 answer
Bryan Passmore Philpott has written:
'The structure of wool and wool textile production, trade, and consumption 1948-68' -- subject(s): Wool industry
'Input output models for projecting and planning the economy' -- subject(s): Economic conditions, Economic policy, Input-output tables
'Economic growth in New Zealand' -- subject(s): Econometric models, Economic policy
'Statistics and production, trade flows, and consumption of wool and wool-type textiles 1948-1965' -- subject(s): Wool industry, Woolen goods industry
'Jobs and high wages' -- subject(s): Econometric models, Labor productivity, Wages and labor productivity
'The economic mechanism' -- subject(s): Economic conditions, Economics
1 answer
Sudan produces the most wool of African countries.
Sudan ranks 7th in the world with regards to the number of sheep.
If you click on 'related links' below the link will take you to the wikipedia page on wool and there is a list there of wool producers.
1 answer
Molly Duncan has written:
'Spin your wool and dye it and weave it'
'Spin, dye & weave your own wool' -- subject(s): Dyes and dyeing, Hand spinning, Hand weaving, Wool
1 answer
When heating steel wool (Fe) with S8, the ionic equation can be represented as Fe(s) + S8(s) -> FeS(s), where iron reacts with sulfur to form iron sulfide.
2 answers
Dryden Brook has written:
'The wool industry in war and peace, a study in control and concentration' -- subject(s): Wool industry
1 answer
Rusted steel wool is usually slightly heavier than regular steel wool of the same size due to the presence of iron oxide (rust) that adds weight to the material. Rusted steel wool may also be denser and more compact compared to regular steel wool because of the rust formation.
2 answers
Herbert Edward Wroot has written:
'Yorkshire abbeys and the wool trade' -- subject(s): Abbeys, History, Wool industry
1 answer
Robert Bakewell has written:
'Travels' -- subject(s): Accessible book, Description and travel, Geology
'An introduction to mineralogy..' -- subject(s): Crystallography, Mineralogy
'Observations on the influence of soil and climate upon wool' -- subject(s): Sheep, Wool
1 answer
CuSO4 (aq) + Fe (s) -> FeSO4 (aq) + Cu (s)
1 answer
Sheep only produce one type of fibre which is called wool but it is of different microns (thicknesses). The higher the number (micron) the finer the wool. The finer micron wool is more expensive and used for suits and the coarser the micron is the more likely it is to be used in carpets etc
2 answers
Most department stores that sell clothes will sell men's wool sweaters. A number of places include: Seers, Woolrich, Overstock and Exofficio. They sell a wide range of wool sweaters.
1 answer
Eva Ann Roseburrough has written:
'Wool statistics and related data through 1957' -- subject(s): Statistics, Wool industry
1 answer
One could buy wool for a purple scarf at their local crafts store. One might also find the wool at specialty stores. Also, they might find it online on a number of retailers sites.
1 answer
To convert ounces to grams, you can multiply the number of ounces by 28.35. Therefore, 7oz of wool is approximately 198 grams.
2 answers
A wool sock is what it sounds like... A sock made from wool... You get wool from a sheep.
2 answers
John P. Hunter has written:
'The economics of wool and mohair production and marketing in Lesotho' -- subject(s): Marketing, Mohair, Mohair industry, Wool, Wool industry
'Red Thunder'
'Rainfall and temperature probability statistics for Lesotho agriculture' -- subject(s): Lesotho, Rainfall probabilities, Temperature normals
1 answer
A wool vest can be purchased from a number of venues. Online retailers such as Amazon carry this item. Traditional catalog merchants, L.L. Bean, Land's End, and J. Crew also have wool vests that can be purchased via phone or online.
1 answer
A wool weaver is one who weaves with wool, fabricating cloth from wool yarn.
1 answer
Wool. You can get wool from shearing sheep and then going to a spinning wheel and spin the wool into a ball of wool.
1 answer
SURE!! Didn´t you know we brazilians till the earth, put little sheep, preferrably pregnant, and bury them. After a few years watering, the tree of wool blossom in a beautiful bailing tree, with sheep at the end of every branch.*sarcasm* Actually wool, being a part of the sheep (it´s fur) it´s not qualified as Agriculture.
1 answer
Merino wool underwear can be purchased from a number of retail outlets including shops on the high street such as Marks and Spencer's online such as Amazon and thermalshop.co.uk.
1 answer