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- From: bmasel@igc.org (Ben Masel)
- Date: 8 Mar 92 03:30:00 GMT
- Newsgroups: talk.politics.drugs
- Subject: Re: Book burning
-
-
- REPOSTING:
-
- The following two responses are abstracts of papers presented at
- the First European Conference on Industrial Uses for Agricultural
- Crops, held at Maastricht, The Netherlands last November. I hope
- to have the full papers soon, and will post when available.
-
- ben
-
- CHARACTERISATION AND PROCESSING OF ANNUAL CROPS
- (ESP. HEMP) FOR PULP AND PAPER
-
- MARIE-JOSE DE SMET
-
- AGROTECHNICAL RESEARCH INSTITUTE, ATO-DLO,
- HAAGSTEEG 6, 6700 AA WAGENINGEN (THE NETHERLANDS)
-
- Hemp is a nonwoody annual plant containing two types of cellulose
- fibers, of which one type originates from the bark, and the other
- from the wood part of the stem. These fibers have different
- physical properties and chemical composition. The long flexible
- bast fiber which occurs in high proportion has long been used for
- textiles and ropemaking. Both fibers can be used in the
- preparation of pulp, paper, and probably numerous other products.
- An important characteristic of the pulping of hemp compared to
- wood is the treatment neccessary to produce pulp is milder.
-
- These and other data have raised the possibility of new approaches
- to pulp manufacturing that overcome the serious environmental
- problems created by the pulp and paper industry and of developing
- energy efficient processes.
-
- The production of pulp and paper from hemp consists of various
- operations. Preliminary production steps are the seperation of
- bark and wood and if storage is required drying or ensiling. The
- numerous steps are: pulping, bleaching, waste-water treatment, and
- the basic operations in papermaking. All these tasks are being
- studied and optimized. The pulping process we have focused on are:
- thermomechanical and chemo- thermomechanical pulping, alkaline
- extraction, organosolv pulping, and biopulping.
-
- The results obtained are promising and indicate that pulp and
- paper can be prepared from hemp using clean processes and that
- substantial energy savings can be achieved. Different qualities of
- pulp and paper can be produce dependent on the pulping process.
-
-
- __________________________________________________
-
- VARIATION OF HEMP (CANNABIS SATIVA) FOR STEM YIELD AND STEM
- QUALITY RELATED CHARACTERS
-
- E.P.M. De Meyer
-
- CPO, P.O.Box 16, 6700 Wageningen, The Netherlands
-
- The feasibility of the production of cellulose by means of the
- annual crop Cannabis Sativa is being studied in the Netherlands.
- This paper deals with one of the basic steps of the project, the
- establishment of a Cannabis collection and the characterisation of
- the populations with respect to yield and quality.
-
- Until now varieties of domesticated Cannabis are selected for the
- production of either phloem fibers or narcotic resin. Both groups
- are represented in the collection, as well as a third group
- consisting of spontaneous populations. The complete collection
- contains about 160 more or less distinctive populations. After
- evaluation, selected populations will be used in a breeding
- programme.
-
- The dry matter production of cannabis plants depends primarily on
- the legnth of the inductive photoperiod which determines the
- duration of the vegetative period at a certain latitude. The
- harvest index - the fraction of the main stems of the total dry
- matter - depends on plant habit traits like degree of branching
- and internode legnth. A summary of the variation for vegetative
- growth will be presented in relation to stem growth parameters as
- measured in a field experiment.
-
- The optimal quality properties of cellulose pulp varieties of
- Cannabis are still under study but it is already clear that the
- available fiber varieties only partially meet the requirements.
-
- Alternative sources of raw materials for paper pulp production are
- usually compared with the main source at present which is conifer
- wood. A comparison of Cannabis fiber dimensions and conifer wood
- dimensions will be presented. Only the fraction of secondary
- phloem fibers is similar to conifer fibers. Almost no variation
- has been detected for the length of the relatively short wood
- fibers of Cannabis, which hampers attempts to improve the quality
- of the xylem fraction by means of breeding. The phloem fibers are
- considered to be the most valuable components of the stem. A quick
- method to estimate phloem fiber content was developed and results
- of the evaluation of the collection with respect to fiber content
- will be presented. Also a method to estimate the amount of primary
- and secondary fibers within the total fraction of phloem fibers
- will be discussed.
-
- ------------------------------------------------------------
-
- Ben Masel, Director WI NORML bmasel@igc.org 608-257-5456
-
- 911 Williamson St, Madison WI 53703
-
- i didn't put politics in the gutter, i found it there.
- ------------------------------------------------------------
-
- =============================================================================
-
- In the early part of the 1900s the US Farm Bureau had
- a department for fiber investigations.
-
- One report is as follows:
-
-
- In the literature of the fiber producing plants of the
- world the word hemp appears frequently, applied oftentimes
- to fibers that are widely distinct from each other. The
- word is usually employed with a prefix, even when the
- true hemp is meant, as manila hemp, sisal hemp, Russian
- hemp, etc. In this article will be considered the hemp
- plant proper, the Cannabis Sativa of the botanists, which
- has been so generally cultivated the world over as a
- cordage fiber that the value of all other fibers as to
- strength and durability is estimated by it.
-
- The Sanskrit name of the plant is bhanga; in Hindostan it
- is called ganja; the Arab name is kinnub, from which,
- doubtless, its Latin name cannabis, is derived; in Persia
- it is known as bung, while in China it is chu ts-ao,
- and in Japan, asa.
-
- Its native home is India and Persia, but it is in general
- cultivation in many parts of the world, both in temperate
- and more tropical climes, though only in Russia and Poland
- in large quantities for export.
-
- French hemp is much valued, but the finest quality comes
- from Italy, and is fine, soft, light colored, and strong.
- Hemp, though grown throughout India, is little cultivated
- for its fiber, although Bombay grown hemp "was proved to
- be superior to Russian."
-
- Hemp is largely grown in Japan for the manufacture of
- cloth. This industry is very old, as prior to the
- introduction of silk weaving it was the only textile
- fabric of the country.
-
- Its cultivation is an established industry in the United
- States, Kentucky, Missouri, and Illinois being the chief
- sources of supply, though the culture has extended as
- far north as Minnesota and as far south as the Mississippi
- Delta, while California has only recently become
- interested in its growth.
-
- Formerly large areas were devoted to the cultivation of
- the plant in the United States, and thirty five years
- ago nearly 40,000 tons of hemp was produced in Kentucky
- alone, while now the figure has diminished due to
- imports of Philippine manila and jute.
-
- Kentucky hemp is used successfully not only for rigging
- of vessels and for twines and yarns and bagging, but
- it is also spun and woven into cloth, just as today
- it is manufactured into fabrics in portions of
- Brittany.
-
- Soil Selection
-
- As in Brittany, so in Kentucky, limestone soils, or the
- alluvial soils such as are found in the river bottoms,
- are best adapted to this plant. The culture, therefore,
- is quite general along the smaller streams of Brittany,
- where the climate is mild and the atmosphere humid.
-
- In Kentucky the best lands only are chosen for hemp,
- and the most favorable results are obtained where there
- is an underlying bed of blue limestone. In certain
- portions of the State, Shelby County for example, it
- is claimed that a finer and tougher fiber is produced
- than in other sections, and this is thought to be
- due to a mixture in the soil of a whitish, oily clay.
- As a general rule, however, light or dry soils or
- heavy, tenacious soils are most unfavorable.
-
- Hemp is not an exhaustive crop. A recent report states
- that in Kentucky a grower in virgin soil sown to hemp
- can be followed with this crop for fifteen to twenty
- years successively; sown then to small grain and clover,
- it can be grown every third year, without fertilizers,
- almost indefinitely.
-
- In New York, it is customary to apply barnyard manures
- as there it is considered essential to put the soil
- in good fertility to make a successful crop.
-
-
- --
- Capt. Kirk: let's head for that planet, third from the sun, it
- looks promising.... |-)
-
-
-