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574 Sentences With "byproducts"

How to use byproducts in a sentence? Find typical usage patterns (collocations)/phrases/context for "byproducts" and check conjugation/comparative form for "byproducts". Mastering all the usages of "byproducts" from sentence examples published by news publications.

"Consumers are unwittingly inhaling these byproducts and these byproducts are cancer-causing carcinogens such as formaldehyde," Danek said.
And some of Google's places are byproducts of its Street View imagery...so this makes AOIs a byproduct of byproducts.
The problem with these disinfectants is that when they come into contact with organic materials, especially urine, they create unhealthy byproducts called disinfection byproducts, or "DBPs".
The reservoirs contain byproducts from mining operations known as tailings.
Isomerization units also convert byproducts into components blended into gasoline.
The same was true of the disinfection byproducts and copper.
They're kind of byproducts that didn't mean to come over.
Additional animal byproducts such as honey may also be excluded.
Disillusionment and cynicism have become natural byproducts of everyday journalism.
Young rebels take on the unpleasant byproducts of festival culture.
The byproducts of this process include gasoline and diesel-like oils.
Here are some of the unexpected byproducts of the nuclear accident.
Water vapor and heat are the only byproducts at the tailpipe.
Some of these problems are byproducts of our brain's reward system.
The researchers found there were more than 100 of these byproducts.
But they make them at room temperature without any toxic byproducts.
There are things like that that will be byproducts of it.
The dam held back tailings, or byproducts from the mining process.
Instead of soy byproducts, ships are being loaded with raw beans.
Prosperity and human flourishing are the predictable byproducts of economic freedom.
For example, many prohormone supplements contain metabolic byproducts of dehydroepiandrosterone (DHEA).
Reformers convert refining byproducts into octane-boosting components blended into gasoline.
It is clean and it also doesn't use any animal byproducts.
That's right: They're all byproducts of the late '90s and early '00s.
New plastics are made from the byproducts of oil and gas production.
Another reason could be the buildup of harmful byproducts from alcohol's breakdown.
The reformer converts refining byproducts into octane-boosting components blended with gasoline.
The chemical reactions can create potentially harmful byproducts that can become airborne.
Hydrogen is considered "clean" because its only byproducts are water and heat.
"Both are necessary byproducts of our addiction to fossil fuels," he said.
Alkylation units convert refining byproducts into octane-boosting components blended into gasoline.
Happiness and completeness might be occasional byproducts but were not the point.
Animal byproducts might be in your detergent, your tattoo dye, or your alcohol.
Testing in the lab showed that exposure to these disinfection byproducts damaged cells.
Isomerization units convert refining byproducts into feedstocks for motor fuel or petrochemical production.
This means forgoing not only meat, but also animal byproducts such as gelatin.
But the prime minister has chipped away at many of the charter's byproducts.
Annual reports for shareholders tend to list only the cumulative profits from byproducts.
Cream also happens to be one of the byproducts of Chobani's yogurt-making.
The 2018 Farm Bill made industrial hemp and all of its byproducts legal.
These small moments of apparent wardrobe examination are just byproducts of modern baseball.
But these meals are not necessarily healthier than those made with animal byproducts.
Traditional vaporizers for both nicotine and THC can release toxic byproducts when heated.
Both exploited the byproducts of blacks' history of oppression to achieve their objectives.
One of the byproducts of late capitalism is celebrity culture, and one of the byproducts of that is how much people will spend to own literally anything associated with celebrity culture (how very Baby's First Look at Das Kapital of me).
That benefits both manufacturers and consumers, but harms everyone who breathes in the byproducts.
Previously, soy byproducts were taxed at a lower rate to stimulate the crushing industry.
U.S. cattle and their byproducts are a major source of the greenhouse gas methane.
Algae CO2 scrubbers freshen air and provide useful byproducts in this sustainable, circular economy.
By unhealthy, he means the creation of these chemical byproducts, such as trans fats.
But growing inequality and marginalization — byproducts of financial globalization — have thrust socialism center stage.
Many of Earth's most deeply comforting foods rely on the byproducts of microbial digestion.
In Alberta, most petrochemical upgrading uses natural gas byproducts like ethane, propane and butane.
Revenue-generating businesses utilizing the byproducts of mining could be part of the answer.
So, how soon will we be driving Fords with parts made of tequila byproducts?
Reformers convert low-octane refining byproducts into high-octane reformate, which is added to gasoline.
Reformers convert low-octane refining byproducts into high-octane components that are blended into gasoline.
"These bacteria are cost-free to the plant, because they use biological byproducts," he says.
Industries Centers, founded in 1993, trades corn byproducts and other grain products, according to ADM.
Important hormones are secreted while we sleep and byproducts of the brain's activity are cleared.
That means there are no animal byproducts including more obscure ingredients like honey and lanolin.
The scientists wondered if there was a more efficient way to remove the toxic byproducts.
In a circular economy, raw materials and byproducts are reused and very little is wasted.
Reformers convert low-octane refining byproducts into octane boosting components that are blended into gasoline.
Then, Meyer compared the beads to volcanic rock, microtektites and industrial byproducts like coal ash.
Rendering companies pick up the dead cows and then convert the corpses into useable byproducts.
Millions die from pollution and car accidents, byproducts of our industrial economy and transportation networks.
There's a difference between disavowing all animal byproducts and simply trying to eat less meat.
Profiling nurtures fear, racism, and inequalities — each of these byproducts divide our society even further.
Usually, the kidneys would just flush out any excess of chemical protein byproducts in the blood.
There workers dye animal hides in small, ramshackle buildings without infrastructure for absorbing hazardous waste byproducts.
Britons worried about these birds should consider that small amounts of disinfection byproducts are already ingested.
That is why I say like news and entertainment are byproducts of conversation, and vice versa.
Most dog food contains rendered meat and byproducts — which could range from wood chips to roadkill.
Systems like the landfill gas collection stations throughout the landfill mounds collect and purify the byproducts.
Alkylation units convert low-octane refining byproducts into octane-boosting components that are blended into gasoline.
These disks are the byproducts of the large clouds of dust and gas that form stars.
Industriousness, solitude, and playfulness – those sequestered byproducts of creative vocations — serve as the exhibition's unifying themes.
However, some byproducts from the research hunts were sold on the domestic market, The Guardian reported.
For lawmakers charged with crafting state budgets, these are the pleasant byproducts of accelerating economic growth.
Argentine growers are protesting at their government's move to raise export taxes for soybeans and byproducts.
"It's important because every time we generate energy in the body, we generate byproducts," Redman said.
"People all vary in how quickly they metabolize" and excrete ketamine and its byproducts, Das said.
Fewer choices, higher ticket prices, and more unhappy customers are the byproducts of misusing trade laws.
They are byproducts of reduced tensions between the United States and Cuba, attributable to engagement itself.
Most of our actual social and economic problems are the bad byproducts of fundamentally good trends.
What's needed is reform of our core institutions to address the bad byproducts, not fundamental dismantling.
The switch was supposed to limit byproducts in the water that arise during the disinfection process.
Americans dissatisfaction with government and the dysfunction of the government itself are substantially byproducts of cultural lag.
But I'd argue that social divides are byproducts of real and unavoidable differences in values and power.
Levels of nicotine and nicotine byproducts in the pee were roughly the same for all the groups.
"The byproducts are surely different molecules than what we have in the terrestrial biome" here on land.
Skeptical Burners complain that empty hydrogen fuel packets litter the Playa and express concerns of waste byproducts.
It all comes down to chemistry, and some nasty little compounds known as disinfection byproducts, or DBPs.
Tailings are the mud-like byproducts, including finely groundrock particles, left over from mining and extracting resources.
In the alkyklation process refining byproducts are converted into octane-boosting chemicals that are blended into gasoline.
Many more of our most fundamental concepts and institutions turn out to be byproducts of financial innovation.
Brazil has dozens of tailings dams, which hold back byproducts generated during the extraction of mineral resources.
That government, analysts say, was one of the byproducts of the Obama administration's landmark Iran nuclear deal.
For example, copper concentrates often have valuable byproducts such as gold but also can include poisonous arsenic.
It's time for tech companies to start doing more about the second-hand byproducts of their models.
Back on the ground, the guides explained that the facility is exploring more uses for its byproducts.
"At the low doses we use for our food, there are no real byproducts formed," he said.
In 1998 the EPA tightened its standards on disinfectants, many of which can have their own toxic byproducts.
Last year, investments in zinc and byproducts represented 11 percent of Votorantim's capital spending of about $3 billion.
A large cloud of gas and dust, both necessary ingredients and byproducts of star formation, dominates the image.
Tailings are the mud-like byproducts, including finely groundrock particles, left over from mining and extracting mineral resources.
But exports of soy byproducts are forecast to drop to 35 million tonnes from around 42.5 million normally.
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) withdrew the proposed rule for uranium and thorium mill tailings, or waste byproducts.
The bubbles that make beer and soda fizzy are actually byproducts from ammonia production used in fertilizer industry.
Other research has suggested that these roasting byproducts may stimulate the growth of helpful microbes in the gut.
Plus, some biofuels use less-efficient stock feeds, which can emit even more byproducts than traditional jet fuel.
The group also looked at other byproducts of heating oils to high temperatures, called advanced glycogen end-products.
NASA has a rich history of spin-off technology; byproducts of its mission to explore the solar system.
Made from molasses and other sugarcane byproducts, rum has been proven to enhance mental health in many ways.
Curkpatrick, who rented the lobster and its surroundings to sell honey and honey byproducts from 2014 to 2016.
The Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) withdrew the proposed rule for uranium and thorium mill tailings, or waste byproducts.
It has plans to grow its business producing chemicals and plastics, but those are byproducts of fossil fuels.
The characters' musings about regrets — life is imperfect, you see — seem superfluous, the byproducts of an overwritten screenplay.
You can't eat any animal byproducts, so it's basically going vegan with a few additional restrictions, Healthline explains.
Again, the allure of nuclear fusion is that it produces no carbon — and its other byproducts are minimal.
Oil and gas drilling yields byproducts like ethane and naphtha, which are used to make plastics and chemicals.
"His films were basically byproducts, filmed happenings of sorts, that would perpetrate certain myths and mythmaking," Lasch says.
It's rich in hormones and animal byproducts, which basically turns cattle into carnivores when they're by nature herbivores.
Nonetheless, molds and their byproducts can indeed be harmful, and even deadly, especially for people with weakened immune systems.
Sweat, urine, poop, and the other fun byproducts of the body are normally treated as waste to be discarded.
Scientists will need to figure out how to optimize production and manage any wasteful byproducts of this microbial alchemy.
When plaque builds up on your teeth, the bacteria emits acid byproducts, which can cause your teeth to weaken.
To top it off, the whole process produces any number of nasty chemical byproducts and is radioactive to boot.
Mycelium has this amazing property to be able to bind together all kinds of organic material, including agricultural byproducts.
Chicago-based ADM, which buys, stores and ships crops and byproducts, is one of the world's biggest grain merchants.
The dam in the town of Brumadinho, which contained tailings, the mud-like byproducts of mining, burst on Jan.
MOSCOW, Feb 2 (Reuters) - Russia plans to ban imports of beef and beef byproducts from New Zealand from Feb.
Growing shipments of natural gas and petroleum byproducts will also boost the country's role as a major energy exporter.
The company has already brought in $1.4 billion from deals to sell silver and gold byproducts from copper mines.
It was made from the byproducts leftover from turning cane into sugar and became a currency of the age.
They're mesmerizing, unconscious byproducts of human activity, which these days dominates even the most indomitable landscapes on the planet.
They didn't contain the harmful byproducts and chemicals of cigarettes, although there was little evidence that they were safe.
How do you create value for the art and the byproducts of this art, and also for the artists?
But that's pretty much what happened, and she seems to regard these cursed byproducts with both fear and reverence.
Each bottle contains 400 calories, around 20-percent of the recommended daily nutritional requirements and no animal products or byproducts.
They are also excluding some common but controversial beauty product ingredients, such as SLS, parabens, alcohol, triclosans and animal byproducts.
The company said cenospheres, which are light, hollow beads that are byproducts of coal combustion, are moving into the river.
Some of these surprises were byproducts of a somewhat routine turnover in Emmy stalwarts, one that happens every few years.
There are some other byproducts of cutting off access to the internet — firmware updates won't be available, for one thing.
For this reason, permafrost thaw is considered one of the most unpredictable and potentially devastating byproducts of rising global temperatures.
The new banknotes use animal byproducts that are found in everything from credit cards and crayons to glue and soap.
Now, a Florida brewery is shunning plastic rings entirely, replacing them with a biodegradable version made from natural brewing byproducts.
The "lake" is actually a human-made ash dump, used to store toxic byproducts from a power plant's burned coal.
The 1970s in particular are littered with such curios and artifacts, byproducts of the decade's pivot to album-oriented rock.
The mutation forms in a gene that makes an enzyme that helps break down byproducts of chemical reactions in cells.
Byproducts of wood fires can build up over time in the chimney, and that residue, known as creosote, is combustible.
This pertains to the ingredients, but it is perhaps even more important when it comes to the byproducts and waste.
"When you talk to him, and knowing him now, he loves that world," says Dana Kahlbaum, the company's byproducts supervisor.
Rendering is a process of using animal byproducts for the production of tallow, grease and feed for animals and aquaculture.
This can be the result of toxins that escape from superfund sites as well as agricultural and energy production byproducts.
Without them, toxic metabolic byproducts can build up within the cells, damaging and eventually killing the nerves, research has found.
These can emit as much as 80% less carbon and fewer byproducts overall when burned compared to conventional jet fuel.
It said the drug worked mainly by reducing damage to cells that can be caused by certain byproducts of carnitine.
"He said that these works are only byproducts and that the only real artwork is the final movie," says Riekeles.
Without them, toxic metabolic byproducts can build up within the cells, damaging and eventually killing the nerves, according to research.
Actually, a lot of crayons are still made with petroleum byproducts, but soybeans are the environmental alternative of the future.
Luckily, there's way less of it in the atmosphere than CO22016 or methane, byproducts from industrial manufacturing and cars' tailpipes.
In reality, it&aposs likely your bickering and lack of intimacy are byproducts of a deeper issue: lack of communication.
"The market doesn't care about impeachment, but there are byproducts of impeachment that could matter for the markets," Clifton said.
None of the analyses (that I've seen) take into account the impact of having to find substitutes for animal byproducts.
The dam in the town of Brumadinho, which contained tailings, the mud-like byproducts of iron ore mining, burst on Jan.
" Brett Fors, a chemistry professor at Cornell, explains that when peroxides combust, "basically they decompose to nontoxic byproducts — C02 and water.
Using byproducts of their brewing process, like wheat and barley, the six-pack rings offer a treat to curious sea life.
They are the byproducts of a process of trial and error, my own social experiments and research as a young professional.
The startup's engineered probiotics break down acetaldehyde, one of the chief byproducts of alcohol metabolization that is thought to cause hangovers.
And so long as there is extremism, the likelihood of radicalization -- and its violent byproducts of militancy and terrorism -- is strong.
It is an Indigenous homeland caught in the jaws of big oil and its dangerous byproducts: environmental degradation and climate change.
Darker spirits, like bourbon and rum, contain higher levels of congeners, which are byproducts that are created during the fermentation process.
When you sleep, your brain literally recharges, removing toxic proteins that accumulate during the day as byproducts of normal neuronal activity.
"One of the biggest byproducts of the decision was really the comfort that advertisers were able to have with the space."
The lawsuit alleges Burger King participated in "deceptive representations" of the burger by not disclosing it is cooked with meat byproducts.
The shale drilling will also support a rise in natural gas liquids production, which yields byproducts like ethane, propane and butane.
Bhopal used the example of cooking a chicken to highlight the vast differences in how much of these byproducts are produced.
For Castro's apologists they are not merely unfortunate and regrettable byproducts of change, they are an essential part of his appeal.
Its byproducts, in turn, are traffic jams, bad ventilation, noise, and all the other ills that metropolitan flesh is heir to.
Get to know your local beekeeper Prybyla recommends befriending your local beekeepers and buying honey and honey byproducts directly from them.
It can use byproducts from wineries or juice bars; anything with a moisture content of more than 70 percent will work.
For example, caffeine and nicotine, both toxic in high doses, are byproducts of the defense responses of tobacco and coffee plants.
Byproducts from oil and gas drilling are the inputs for chemicals such as polyethylene, the most commonly used plastic in manufacturing.
A separate project financed by the carmakers subjected human volunteers to doses of nitrogen dioxide, one of diesel's most noxious byproducts.
Studies have shown regular bottled water is no safer, but does generate huge mounds of wasteful byproducts like plastic and carbon dioxide.
About a third of the estimated cancer diagnoses was attributed to disinfection byproducts -- chemicals that are a byproduct of treating drinking water.
That means the Moon — a dead rock incapable of supporting life — is being showered with the byproducts of life here on Earth.
The problem with this kind of oxygen-free metabolism is that it can cause toxic byproducts to build up in the muscles.
The designer packs custom-made molds with a mixture of agricultural byproducts and mushroom mycelium, which result in lightweight, biodegradable lamp shades.
Now that we are certain "The Scream" is free of avian byproducts, below are future research papers I'd like to see published:
The lactose is eventually eaten by microorganisms in the large intestine, producing, as byproducts, various gases that cause bloating, cramping and flatulence.
Now, however, I have limited the fur in these collections and going forward to food byproducts, which does not sound very sexy.
Once that fluid burns away, the flames become clear since the engine runs on liquid oxygen and hydrogen — both byproducts of water.
Though sterile, urine reacts with pool disinfectants, mostly chlorine, to form dangerous byproducts including trichloramine, which can irritate eyes, the researchers say.
NASA is also working on developing techniques to regenerate oxygen from atmospheric byproducts, such as the carbon dioxide we exhale while breathing.
That direct line of communication between Tehran and Washington is one of the many auspicious byproducts of the nuclear deal with Iran.
They don't tend to stick around for long and the collision byproducts that physicists would like to see appear at attosecond scales.
The cyanide dissolves and separates the gold where it's pumped to a refinery, recovered along with any byproducts like silver, or mercury.
One of the byproducts of supersonic flight is the sonic boom, which can be unpleasant or distressing to those on the ground.
According to Vale, byproducts from the mining process have reached the company's administrative area and part of the community of Vila Ferteco.
Avoiding the byproducts "In the Chinese snacks, there are virtually no trans-fatty acids, less than 1% (in some cases)," Bhopal said.
"The byproducts of methanol metabolism cause an accumulation of acid in the blood (metabolic acidosis), blindness, and death," a CDC report said.
They consume the proteins in our cells and produce byproducts like methane and hydrogen sulfide gas that bloat and rupture the body.
Absentminded Yelping and indifferent glances at New York Times push notifications may now be taken-for-granted byproducts of the digital revolution.
Consequentially, Everything Is Connected is mistaken in presenting conspiracy theories as mere cultural byproducts rather than agents of change in American society.
Russia has been angling to have its condensates excluded from the deal, and base cuts only on crude oil production, not byproducts.
The resultant works — small and subtle — feel almost incidental, byproducts of the artist's investigations in being and doing rather than burnished masterpieces.
The mechanical act of brushing removes the very sticky dental plaque -- a mixture of bacteria, their acids and sticky byproducts and food remnants.
But there are also inedible byproducts like fish scales and orange peels that could be put to productive use with a little creativity.
The chemical reactions that create these byproducts also mean there's less chlorine left in the water to kill bacteria, such as E. coli.
Byproducts of swimmers' urine, feces and sweat mixing with chlorine can even build up in the air of indoor pools, triggering asthma attacks.
Both are byproducts of the fermentation process, with alcohol weighing in at seven calories per gram and carbs at four calories per gram.
For years, they tinkered with different strains of the plant and different methods for distilling the plant's powers into oils and other byproducts.
Animals with this label can be fed only organic grass or grain with no byproducts and cannot be treated with antibiotics or hormones.
Zuckerberg would like to characterize these scandals as unforeseen byproducts of an otherwise noble mission to make the world more open and connected.
But one brewery is tackling this issue head-on, making a biodegradable, edible version of the classic rings created from natural brewing byproducts.
Atmospheric warming, ocean warming, ocean acidification, sea-level rise, deglaciation, desertification, eutrophication—these are just some of the byproducts of our species' success.
Byproducts from mining, known as tailings, are often kept in ponds near mines specifically made to contain the rock particles, chemicals and water.
If we've learned anything from our own history, it's that few valuable cultural byproducts come from the marbled crypts where they wind up.
As muscles fatigue, exercise byproducts build up, energy (in the form of ATP) levels drop, and both blood sugar and glycogen levels diminish.
The researchers will need to figure out the optimal conditions for their bacterial factory to work, and to isolate psilocybin from any byproducts.
A separate project financed by the carmakers subjected human volunteers in Germany to doses of nitrogen dioxide, one of diesel's most noxious byproducts.
In recent years, the E.P.A. has required water utilities to limit these disinfectant byproducts, though doing so can be costly and technically challenging.
When it&aposs burned or used in a fuel cell, hydrogen produces a lot of energy with only water and heat as byproducts.
McDonald&aposs partnered with Ford&aposs research team, which was already using agave, wheat, tomatoes, and even denim byproducts to make car parts.
Opinion Columnist SINGAPORE — One of the most negative byproducts of the Trump presidency is that all we talk about now is Donald Trump.
A boom in natural gas drilling in the region has created a cheap and abundant supply of the byproducts used in the industry.
I just think that one of the interesting byproducts of being a foreign correspondent is that you spend a lot of time alone.
Do we continue — continue with the inequities, the injustice, the unemployment, the under-education, that creates these byproducts that we see this evening?
The blood tests showed that the 67-year-old had high levels of thiocyanate, one of the byproducts of cyanide breakdown in the body.
The government will also inspect about 140 of the nation's dams that hold back so-called tailing ponds, where byproducts from mines are stored.
One possible reason for this is the way our body metabolizes booze, Adams says, which involves enzymes breaking down the alcohol into toxic byproducts.
One of the most visible byproducts is a resignation rate of 2.4% of jobs, the highest since April 2001, the beginning of the recession.
Exports of phosphates and byproducts including fertilisers climbed in the first five months this year by 7.8% to a value of 20.8 billion dirhams.
Chatterjee and his colleagues were able to study how byproducts of El Niño, like droughts and wildfires, contribute to this spike in carbon levels.
Vegan products, on the other hand, contain no animal byproducts of any kind including meat, dairy, or eggs, but can contain ingredients like alcohol.
The slag, which contains such byproducts as arsenic, mercury and thallium, was likely absorbed by plants and then subsequently eaten by humans and livestock.
Chlorine reacts with organic material in the water to produce carcinogenic byproducts such as trihalomethanes; it also makes water more acidic, which corrodes pipes.
"The byproducts of methanol metabolism cause an accumulation of acid in the blood (metabolic acidosis), blindness, and death," the CDC says on its website.
One of the many unhappy byproducts of the election and now rule of Donald Trump is the return of fear to the political table.
But Bernie Sanders's argument that "toxic waste byproducts of nuclear plants are not worth the risks of the technology's benefit" might also be damaging.
But moving freight, flying and producing everything from consumer plastics, to tires, to chemicals, to roads, currently uses refinery byproducts that liberate fossil carbon.
"Heat may help as it increases blood flow to the tissue and allows for improved oxygenation, removal of inflammatory byproducts, and relaxation," Cardwell says.
Less examined are the negative byproducts that came with fire, and the ways in which humans may or may not have adapted to them.
But drug gangs in Brabant regularly dump the toxic byproducts from labs in parks, streets, and forests, or along the side of the road.
Acuña has been particularly opposed to Conga's plan to drain four mountain lakes and convert them into storage areas for, often-toxic, mining byproducts.
These byproducts of normal metabolism, also called oxygen radicals, accumulate in the body and over time cause damage to cells and organs, she explained.
What's missing is the link between the two: the massive plants that turn natural gas byproducts into the inputs needed to manufacture plastic products.
The plants, called crackers, heat natural gas byproducts, like ethane and propane, in order to break them down, or "crack" them, in industry parlance.
The United States has also become a leader in producing cheap natural gas byproducts in recent years, making it attractive to investors, he said.
And here&aposs why:When you burn hydrogen as a fuel source it produces a ton of energy and only water and heat as byproducts.
Sure, people think pee is sterile (it's not), but its chemicals can react with the pool water to form so-called "disinfectant byproducts," or DBPs.
We love digging for stuff, selling it, and polluting the environment with the byproducts, so why not dig beneath the seafloor with its untapped potential?
Many fertilizers contain nutrients that are great for your plants but stormwater pollutes local bodies with byproducts from your lawn that seriously hurt aquatic life.
There's just not much we know about its effects, thanks largely to the regulatory morass surrounding cannabis and its byproducts that has slowed down research.
It's always great to see huge corporations such as Oscar Mayer make positive changes in their product, such as removing any byproducts or added preservatives.
McMaster opened his restaurant, Silo, in Brighton in 2014, sourcing from local farmers, avoiding packaging, and trying to put everything into a dish, including byproducts.
Most of the "meteorwrongs" are actually masses of iron, glassy byproducts from smelting ore called slags, or igneous rocks with small cavities called vesicular rocks.
The wave of investment is being driven by a boom in U.S. oil and natural gas production, which produces byproducts used in the petrochemical industry.
This increase in circulation may help flush away some of the biochemical byproducts of hard workouts, like lactate, he says, reducing inflammation and muscle aches.
Iodine then reacts with natural organic matter that is already present in the treatment system and produces disinfection byproducts that are extremely toxic and carcinogenic.
Here, again, Christ is still suspiciously present in Christmas, despite that it's "Santa" going around murdering the byproducts of various marital trespasses from decades past.
The other category includes incidental contaminants that may be toxic, such as persistent pesticide residues in cotton or toxic byproducts created during the manufacturing process.
These plants, called crackers, heat oil and natural gas byproducts in order to break them down — or "crack" them — and turn them into base chemicals.
Some of those byproducts are transported to the Gulf Coast from natural gas-rich basins underlying parts of Pennsylvania, Ohio, West Virginia and neighboring states.
Still, Ms. Blackstock stresses that overall the benefits of maintaining a healthy lifestyle through swimming far outweigh any potential risks from exposure to disinfection byproducts.
The agriculture ministry said in a resolution in the government's official gazette it had decided to modify export taxes on grains, oilseed and their byproducts.
One of the most likely byproducts of global warming is more extreme precipitation events as warmer temperatures can hold more water vapor in the atmosphere.
Mr. Muhammad protested that his plant, which employs 150 people, does not slaughter animals at all, but instead uses byproducts discarded by government-approved slaughterhouses.
In exchange for a place to live, the algae provide the clams with byproducts of photosynthesis, such as sugars, allowing them to grow into giants.
According to the pro-trade Adam Smith Institute, chlorinated poultry would make up 0.3% to 1% of the disinfection byproducts consumed in the typical daily diet.
Corn this year should bring in $3.3 billion in export revenue while drought-hit 2017/20173 soy and byproducts fetch some $14 billion, de Freijo said.
This results in many other byproducts of hydro development including unsafe ice for transportation, habitat destruction, and the scaring off of animals for hunting and trapping.
January 2, 2015 - The city warns residents the water contains byproducts of disinfectants that may cause health issues including an increased risk for cancer over time.
One of the unfortunate byproducts of sexism is the demand that people who identify as masculine be self-actualized and self-assured out of the womb.
When things begin to thaw, the byproducts of the methane gas leave behind a reddish residue, which slowly accumulates into the rusty patch we see now.
In the showers of proton collision byproducts that occurred during the 2015 run of CERN's ATLAS and CMS experiments, it seemed there was a new particle.
Wind turbines are an easy way to generate electricity without any of the harmful byproducts that contribute to climate change, like air pollution and carbon emissions.
That process requires a greater than normal amount of "flaring" -- the burning off of gas byproducts at the ends of long chimneys that look like candles.
But these so-called pyro and hydro-metallurgical techniques are energy intensive and produce toxic gas byproducts, and the materials they recover are often low quality.
Right now, there are no cost-effective outlets for the byproducts of reducing wildfire risk because most areas in the West have lost markets for wood.
The Centers for Disease Control classifies phthalate exposure as "widespread" in the US. Virtually everyone has one or more phthalate byproducts in their urine, Zota said.
Green gas is produced from waste such as sewage, manure, food waste, and fuel crops, as well as byproducts from chemical processes, according to the report.
It starts when alcohol is broken down in the body— when the body processes alcohol, one of the byproducts is acetaldehyde, which is a toxic substance.
This pigment, along with other byproducts of the destroyed muscle, are removed from the body through the kidneys, a process that can damage these essential organs.
A vegan diet consists of only plant-based products with no exceptions made for animal byproducts; unlike vegetarians, vegans eat no milk, eggs, or similar products.
Many animal products and byproducts, like steak and eggs, are complete proteins, which is one of the main differences between many vegan and non-vegan diets.
Mr. Berry introduces us to ALCOHOL RUB, LESSON PLAN, BRITANNICA, LEGOLAS and BYPRODUCTS and brings back the older entries PARTIALITY, TEA CADDIES, SPACE SUITS and ALEXANDERS.
Zuboff describes how Google, in its early days, happened to keep a cache of data byproducts — spelling, click patterns, location — that were produced with each search.
The employees include two senior managers at the mine, where a dam collapsed on Friday, spilling a river of sludge containing mining byproducts into the surrounding area.
To some extent, yes: As long as there's a meat industry, there are byproducts from it, and it's not like most humans are eating much bone meal.
As for a Bluetooth cassette player, it's probably true that nobody needs such a thing; hyper-specific products are one of the nice byproducts of late capitalism.
The authors say disinfection byproducts can be minimized by frequently cleaning spas, more frequently exchanging water in pools and making sure people shower before they get in.
What if you only tested a drug on a bunch of liver cells, but failed to account for the effect of certain byproducts produced by the kidneys?
Bright sun, scorching heat, sticky humidity — the sweet byproducts of the season are happening in full force right now, and our makeup is taking the biggest hit.
Vale has faced global condemnation and scrutiny since the dam, which held back mining byproducts, burst in January in the company's second such disaster in four years.
Florida-based Saltwater Brewery invented a biodegradable and compostable version of the classic plastic rings that makes use of their natural brewing byproducts, like wheat and barley.
Some of these byproducts are present in human sewage, and can act like biomarkers for substances such as cocaine and weed, as previous WBE studies have shown.
The robust U.S. consumption was driven by strong economic growth and high demand in the petrochemicals industry, which processes fossil fuels and byproducts into chemicals like plastics.
"The noxious byproducts of mezcal production are traditionally dumped into rivers or open spaces," explains Eleana Nuñez, who holds the enviable title of Agave Ambassador for Sombra.
Now, fancy skin-care lines and Target staples alike offer plenty to choose from for vegans (and those who just want to treat skin sans animal byproducts).
Production of sulphuric acid and copper in cake byproducts are at similar output levels to zinc, Noranda said, and Glencore was working with customers to minimize disruption.
Saudi Aramco is also identifying new uses for crude oil, particularly in the petrochemicals sector, which uses byproducts from fossil fuels to create plastics and specialty chemicals.
Glencore Plc CEO Ivan Glasenberg in February flagged "emerging inflationary pressures," but then said the company could offset them through sales of expensive byproducts, such as cobalt.
It could be used to monitor the byproducts of medication to tell if someone hasn't taken their medication in a while and remind them to do it.
This removed some of the nation-wide economic incentive for states to pursue industry as much as possible while piping the hot, hazardous byproducts to their neighbors.
We need to test the efficacy of our treatment processes for removing these compounds and their byproducts so that these do not end up in our environment.
While refined metal is largely standardised and priced on global metals exchanges, the content of concentrates vary sharply due to a wide range of byproducts and impurities.
That leaves decoupling, aiming for that exalted future state of a "circular economy," in which all byproducts become feedstocks for something else and there is no waste.
It is this system and its harmonious byproducts that we have leveraged in selling our political system to countries across the globe — most recently, Iraq and Afghanistan.
"All pet foods are made from the byproducts of human food production," explains Marion Nestle, a nutrition professor, in a New York Times article on the subject.
But one can't deny that artists like Tim Maia and Cassiano were byproducts of the same kind of soul and funk that gave birth to R&B.
Many species of bacteria in a healthy gut feed on bile acids, casting off byproducts that, Dr. Khoruts said, appear to slow the growth of C. difficile.
The buildings hold thousands of skins, all byproducts of meat production in the United States, Canada and Europe, and the tanning operations take place on the premises.
But one of the byproducts of the campaign is that Iran's reach now extends even deeper throughout Iraq and seems unlikely to go away any time soon.
She suggested that the majority of the spend would be on soybeans, followed by smaller purchases of nuts and fruits, pork, poultry, corn, sorghum and ethanol byproducts.
"He functioned pretty well, but because I knew he was having the problem he was having, I could also see the byproducts of the problem," Isakson said.
Popcast One of the unexpected byproducts of the streaming era is how a certain tier of artists — already famous, prone to eccentricity — have doubled down on albums.
China planned to impose consumption taxes on oil byproducts such as mixed aromatics, light cycle oil and bitumen blend in May but no official announcement was made.
In 2014, the Taiwanese police raided a factory in southern Taiwan that was accused of producing hundreds of tons of oil recycled from restaurant waste and slaughterhouse byproducts.
While newspapers are teaming up to double down on their climate change coverage, broadcasters are focusing on covering the byproducts of climate change — natural disasters and extreme weather.
Take one look at them, and it's clear that something must be working to give them minimal wrinkles and plump skin, two supposed byproducts of ingesting the protein.
Stones are a build-up of waste byproducts like salt that solidify in our urinary tract, and can be caused by lots of different factors, including unlucky genetics.
Do they help bacteria survive and reproduce, or are they mere byproducts of bacteria's basic biology, rather like magnetism, which could be considered a byproduct of quantum mechanics?
One of the byproducts of fermentation, methanol, gets people just as drunk as normal alcohol — but lethally damages the liver, the optic nerve, and neurological and respiratory systems.
The FDA and most health experts agree that e-cigarettes are likely less harmful than traditional cigarettes because they don't produce the cancer-causing byproducts of burning tobacco.
"The long-term impacts on our children that have been byproducts of this health crisis won't end just because a settlement has been done," the county official said.
"Based on what we have seen in our study, we suspect that most cases involve chemical contaminants, toxic byproducts or other noxious agents within vape liquids," Larsen said.
"Fish farms produce lots of toxic byproducts, and so the farmers have to pump out an enormous volume of water, which is creating a sinking zone," he explained.
The basic chemistry behind the spirits we know and love—fermentation of something starchy or sugary, followed by distillation of the boozy byproducts—was worked out centuries ago.
In Minnesota, farmer Randy Spronk is using recycled bakery byproducts such as breads, cakes and candies for 10% of his hogs' rations to reduce his need for corn.
It's thought that this has to do with interactions between the excess glucose and proteins and fats also present in the bloodstream, which are converted into destructive byproducts.
The process was invented by Jerzy Wysocki, a wheat farmer and miller, who invented the material when searching for a use for the byproducts of his milling process.
High levels of cortisol or adrenaline (both byproducts of stress) in the body stymie the supply of oxygen to the organs, thereby decreasing blood flow to the penis.
Those tensions within the Middle East are, in large part, byproducts of five years of upheaval that started with 2011 uprisings that have upended countries across the region.
Loud but odorless episodes are usually a result of the former, says Dr. Raymond, while those emissions with an, um, stronger smell are usually byproducts of the latter.
Here, it dictates and shapes the menu; eight out of 11 courses on the menu contain some ingredients which are byproducts or recycled from another process or dish.
Rum, like our very own Deep Island Hawaiian Rum, has to be made from sugarcane or sugarcane byproducts, and it cannot be distilled to strength over 189.9 proof.
While the least effective works of the exhibition criticize neoliberalism from an intellectual ivory tower, the strongest pieces effectively engage visitors by inverting the byproducts of neoliberal consumerism.
Their diet consists of meat byproducts, soy, processed oils and other additives, all of which contribute to climate change, and many farmed salmon producers use antibiotics and hormones.
Because the misshapen red blood cells live just a fifth as long as normal ones, Helen developed gallstones from the byproducts of recycling huge numbers of dying cells.
Russia has also been angling to have condensates removed from the deal, meaning it would only to have its actual crude oil production counted, not other petroleum byproducts.
Russian influence operations and viral false reports should have been anticipated byproducts of Facebook's business model, which is based on selling advertising on the back of user engagement.
It's a remarkably flavorful dinner situation that leaves you with a couple of excellent byproducts useful during a holiday week: rendered duck fat and super-concentrated duck broth.
That's why the team turned to metabolic analysis, which takes an in-depth look at the hundreds of substances that are formed as byproducts of reactions in the body.
" Similarly, Suzanne Bell, a forensic and analytical chemist at West Virginia University, has been looking at toxicity and byproducts of synthetic cannabinoids and "trying to understand these unusual effects.
In Call and Response, the most striking evidence of her artistic grappling with the byproducts of Jim Crow are found in the sketches she created between 2000 and 2002.
Money, respect, power: they're all secondary, the byproducts of doing whatever you do by the highest possible standards, no matter what the powers that be throw in your way.
Some of your favorite fragrances, bath bombs, shower gels, and more were merely the byproducts of romance epics so good, they could rival the biggest Meg Ryan tear-jerker.
Samples of each product are also sent to an independent lab contracted by U.S. Halal Certification to test for traces of pork or pork byproducts before certification is issued.
Most of these symptoms can be explained as byproducts of hyperventilation, but breathwork adds in a component of guided meditation, with prompts and after-care and some therapeutic suggestions.
Still, on top of potentially toxic byproducts including air pollution, this could "lock in" demand for plastic waste in order to keep these facilities operating, the Greenpeace report warns.
Transporting fossil rocks and cleaning up the gaseous, liquid and solid byproducts of their use simply costs more than piped-in natural gas or directly delivered sunshine and breeze.
Ridding their routines of "toxins" and "additives" and "byproducts" by ditching their prescription topicals and flushing their supply of antibiotics or Accutane won't miraculously give them clear, radiant skin.
The 4,355-ton vessel had a crew of 21 North Korean citizens and was in the Philippines to unload a shipment of agricultural byproducts often used as livestock feed.
The building boom is being driven by a surge in U.S. natural gas output, which has yielded a cheap and abundant source of byproducts that go into American polyethylene.
Though they are not opposed to meat eating fundamentally, they deplore the enormous amounts of land required for it, unethical production methods and other unhealthy byproducts of the industry.
Games in this genre can generally only conceive of nations or countries, those giant systems of governance that dominate our lives, as structures that produce bad byproducts at best.
This seemed like a complete waste of money and infrastructure, but these are the strange byproducts of what feels like a decades-long playground argument between our two countries.
New York's bill would funnel hundreds of millions of dollars into economically disadvantaged areas around the state, particularly those that have been devastated by pollution and other industrial byproducts.
The byproducts left behind — carbon dioxide, methane, water and biomass (expired micro-organisms, humus, and organic waste; all carbon-based) — can be potentially recaptured and used for other purposes.
Some states have cut back on budgets for their drinking water programs, and many communities focus on tracking just a handful of key contaminants like coliform or disinfectant byproducts.
To the degree that we're still producing and refining petrochemicals, all steps necessary should be taken to keep them and their byproducts out of our air, soil and water.
The components of urine and sweat — not to mention personal care products — react with chlorine to form compounds called disinfection byproducts that can irritate the eyes, lungs and skin.
Aramco said the move would be consistent with Aramco's strategy of diversifying into high value businesses, including refining crude oil into fuels and processing byproducts into petrochemicals like plastics.
Combat climate change by cutting beef and lamb production There is "huge potential [to lower emissions] by eating more byproducts and reducing waste along the supply chain," Liu said.
Another issue: It's not always clear what compounds a package is made of because manufacturing plastic polymers also yields a lot of byproducts that aren't necessarily tested for safety.
That's because the usual symptoms of a cold — sneezing, runny nose, coughing — are really just byproducts of your body trying to rid itself of the virus, not the virus itself.
The current crises of fake news, political ads, and the constant and unhindered harassment of marginalized groups are all the byproducts of Facebook and Twitter playing Monopoly with our information.
"It's a carbon source for the bacteria in our colon who produce a range of healthy byproducts for the human gut," said William Sullivan, the paper's first author from RMIT.
Viewed as a healthier alternative to smoking, users inhale steam from the nicotine-filled devices, rather than burning cigarettes with byproducts of paper, tobacco and a range of other chemicals.
It's not just the bacteria itself you need to worry about, but its byproducts, which include enzymes that degrade organic materials such as fats and proteins, ultimately irritating the skin.
Most of these minerals are mined in China, where the millions of nearby residents are threatened by radioactive waste and other byproducts China's lax environmental laws have failed to police.
Canada's oil sands produce large volumes of byproducts, usually captured in toxic tailings ponds, and associated animal deaths have fueled international concern about the environmental impact of developing the sector.
Freedom Sausage is responsible for disposing of any byproducts and separating any meat from deer thought to have Chronic Wasting Disease, a contagious neurological disease affecting deer, elk and moose.
He said the byproducts of ethanol production could be used as poultry or fish food, and that more maize could be grown on delta islands if demand for it rises.
In the early twentieth century, plastics and fossil fuels rose together, with the byproducts of oil and natural gas refining processes being used as the raw material for plastic production.
In confirming the nature of the North Korea explosion, specialized aircraft will collect air samples that will be analyzed for radioactive particles and gases that are byproducts of thermonuclear blasts.
Advanced internal combustion systems power today's newest ships, which are equipped with large diesel engines using blended marine fuels that are cheap and dirty left-over byproducts of world refining.
Every year unique pharmaceuticals and personal care products are introduced by the health care industry, the byproducts of which eventually find their way into our rivers, streams, lakes and oceans.
"One of the byproducts of expanding the categories is that listeners might be introduced to songs and artists and albums that they might not have previously checked out," Lipshutz said.
Factory workers, primates, adult babies, mutants: Mothersbaugh's characters all experience some physical pain or regression at the hands of technology, its byproducts (like radiation), or its support systems (like advertising).
To increase the availability of other types of animal feed, China's customs authority removed inspection requirements on a variety of agricultural byproducts, including peanut meal, cottonseed meal and rapeseed meal.
The exhibition reminds us that while war is never less than hell, some of its byproducts can be breathtaking and, in their soul-nurturing beauty, the very antithesis of war.
Let's just say that certain pork "byproducts" are combined to make a kind of cake, which I cut into slices, dredge with flour and fry in a cast-iron skillet.
Always produced without oversight, and at times by people with little skill or care, or in unsanitary conditions, homebrews risk contamination with distillation byproducts, like methanol, that careful distillers remove.
Lab tests showed high urinary levels of metabolites, or byproducts, of three flame retardants: diphenyl phosphate (DPHP), bis(1,3-dichloro-2-propyl) phosphate (BDCIPP) and isopropylphenyl phenyl phosphate (ip-PPP).
One of the byproducts of that is that these women, nearly all of whom are now in their 40s, never got the chance to take part in something like this.
Dams like the one that failed are, in essence, lakes of thick, semi-hardened mud, consisting of water and the solid byproducts of ore mining, which are known as tailings.
"Luckily, there are a few Higgs production mechanisms that produce identifiable particles as byproducts," Chris Palmer, a physicist at Princeton University and member of the CMS team, said in a statement.
The same might be said about production and consumption, which, far from creating an efficient feedback loop, have spewed their hazardous byproducts far into the air and deep into the sea.
It certainly won't stop you from swallowing pee—in fact, pee interacts with chlorine to create a slew of nasty chemical byproducts that can lead to red eyes, and respiratory problems.
Multiple layers of soil and geo-composite lie above and below an impermeable plastic liner that prevents waste and its byproducts—landfill gas and leachate—from migrating into the surrounding environment.
Two particles are smashed together at extreme energies and the result is an energetic shower of particle byproducts; you might imagine pairs of wine glasses impacting dead-on at bullet speeds.
Methanol, a chemical used in the refining, is recycled, and the company is trying to develop local markets for byproducts like glycerin and potassium salts, which can be used as fertilizer.
Once the tobacco is warmed up, the glycerine helps create an aerosol, which gives users a smoking experience reminiscent of regular cigarettes without some of the toxic byproducts created by combustion.
Dr. McFadden said the investigation was looking for potential irritants in the water, including more than 20 heavy metals, a range of organic compounds, and byproducts of chlorine and other disinfectants.
"When you see severe environmental strains of one sort or another on cultures, on civilizations, on nations, the byproducts of that are unpredictable and can be very dangerous," Mr. Obama said.
Matthew Bunn, a specialist in nuclear security at Harvard's John F. Kennedy School of Government, said another worry was the byproducts of the isotopes made at Mol, such as Cesium-137.
Scientists interested in cannabis as a subject for pharmaceutical studies may find an unlikely new home for their research into the plant, its byproducts and biochemistry aboard the International Space Station.
Edward Alden, who co-authored the report, tells me that negative byproducts of automation are already visible in worsening U.S. inequality and a plunge in living standards in community after community.
MycoWorks is a company that uses fungus and other plant byproducts to create leather-like materials, which looks and feels around the same texture as normal leather, if a little softer.
The London-listed miner and commodities trader, which posted record half-year earnings in August, said then it had been facing higher costs and weak prices for cobalt and other byproducts.
So brain blood levels don't drop enough to allow substantial waves of cerebrospinal fluid to circulate around the brain and clear out all the metabolic byproducts that accumulate, like beta amyloid.
Most of the noises in our lives are the accidental byproducts of some activity we need or at least tolerate for reasons having nothing to do with the sounds they make.
Second, when it comes to environmental regulations, the U.S., the most industrialized country in the world, has agreed to cut back on negative byproducts, carbon emissions, toxic waste, and so forth.
The abuses that have followed from these policies — the sprawling carceral state, the random detention of black people, the torture of suspects are, at the very least, byproducts of democratic will.
Global energy prices have risen sharply from 2016's lows, driving up prices for not only diesel but also packing material like plastics, which are byproducts of crude and natural gas.
In addition, oil and its byproducts create plastics and other basic materials that are part of the everyday products we use in our daily lives, like our smartphones, clothes and even medicines.
Tests that utilize urine or saliva are actually searching for cocaine metabolites, small molecules that are byproducts of the body processing the drug—and these flush out of the system pretty quickly.
Under the legislation, U.S. energy companies could be prohibited from working on ventures in neighboring countries that utilize pipelines or railways that cross Russian territory to ship equipment, petroleum products and byproducts.
In an interview with state media published Monday, a senior official said "three strict bans" would temporarily remain in place on the import, export, and sale of rhinos, tigers and their byproducts.
Those dams, which hold mining byproducts, are cheaper to build but present higher security risks because their walls are constructed over a base of muddy mining waste rather than on solid ground.
In 2015, one of most hideous byproducts of American foreign policies in the Arab and Muslim worlds, the so-called Islamic State, was ascendant, having declared a caliphate in Syria and Iraq.
Federal law forbids mixtures of alcohol and THC, marijuana's psychoactive component; brewers are trying to get around that by putting THC into nonalcoholic drinks, and infusing alcoholic beers with other cannabis byproducts.
Still, what the actor candidly, maybe even too candidly, describes as personal shortcomings, his colleagues frame as byproducts of a fierce intelligence and dedication to craft, which can sometimes manifest as impatience.
The new proposal is part of a growing pushback against some of the less popular byproducts of the technology juggernaut that has invaded the San Francisco Bay Area over the past decade.
I think exercise, trying to keep you mind and body in a good place, is good to stop anxiety and depression and the byproducts of spending too much time in this [online] world.
"We can help our bodies do their job and get rid of toxins and byproducts of metabolic processes by simply eating well," says Kim Larson, RDN, spokesperson for The Academy of Nutrition & Dietetics.
Argote's paintings fit that name only in so far as they are pigment applied to fabric, while the byproducts of their creation summon works by masters of the medium, with enormous market value.
The U.S. shale drilling revolution is fueling a wave of investment in U.S. petrochemical plants, the facilities that use byproducts from oil and natural gas production to create the building blocks for plastics.
China dominates production of many of the minor metals, which tend to be produced as byproducts in relatively small quantities and trade is more opaque than in major base metals, such as copper.
It's not dangerous; it produces no toxic byproducts; it doesn't require a bunch of government safety rules and enforcement; in theory, mom-and-pop gas stations could get a pump running pretty cheaply.
Every year, more than 3 billion male chickens are killed around the world within hours of being born, disposed of as unnecessary byproducts of a system that prizes eggs and egg-laying hens exclusively.
In fact, sweat itself doesn't have an odor — bacteria (or the byproducts of bacteria) does, and it will feed off lipids and proteins in your sweat, secreting compounds that smell like onions or cheese.
When you exercise, your body calls upon and breaks down these stores of triglycerides for energy, leaving you with a bunch of CO2 and a smaller amount of H2O as byproducts of that process.
That's right — one of the brain's crucial jobs during sleep is clearing itself of all the toxic byproducts that have built up as a side effect of all your hard thinking during the day.
Similar-looking drugs can sometimes even have opposite effects—and some byproducts of fentanyl manufacturing can produce extremely hazardous substances, such as MPTP, which destroys the brain's dopamine neurons and rapidly causes Parkinson's Disease.
It would store low to intermediate-level radioactive material ranging from contaminated gloves and gowns to the byproducts of radio-pharmaceuticals and the re-processing of spent fuel from a research reactor in Sydney.
BRIGHTON, England (Reuters) - A 23-year-old Briton has cooked up a compostable compound she hopes will one day replace much single-use plastic - and its main ingredient is byproducts of the fishing industry.
Belgium has both low-enriched uranium, which fuels its two power plants, and highly enriched uranium, which is used in its research reactor primarily to make medical isotopes, plus the byproducts of that process.
One of the most fascinating byproducts of this geopolitical shift was the Apollo-Soyuz Test Project (ASTP), the first collaborative space mission between these two initial space powers, or any nations for that matter.
But chances are that if done right, it can help mitigate some of the worst byproducts of growing the stuff illegally, especially if politicians are willing to acknowledge that marijuana is here to stay.
Urine will combine with the chlorine in the pool to create other chemicals, leaving less chlorine available to act as a disinfectant and kill bacteria (and the chemical byproducts created will irritate your eyes).
The company worked with a LEED-certified sustainable denim factory that recycles 98 percent of its water, relies on alternative energy sources and repurposes its byproducts by turning them into bricks for affordable housing.
"We are convinced that emissions of nitrogen oxide can be controlled in cities with modern diesel and without driving bans," said Daimler CEO Dieter Zetsche, referring to diesel byproducts that can cause respiratory ailments.
The Shell Pennsylvania Petrochemicals Complex in Monaca, just outside of Pittsburgh, is scheduled to be finished in the early 2020, and will focus on producing plastic made from byproducts of fracking for natural gas.
But it is one of the most noteworthy byproducts of lucrative endorsement deals that prominent programs like North Carolina, U.C.L.A., Kansas and Michigan have with sports apparel companies like Nike, Adidas and Under Armour.
However, it's unclear here if the curators have considered the conflict between the chair's message and the carbon footprint created by Abloh's fashion companies and the additional social and environmental byproducts of mass consumption.
The minerals are then purified at temperatures up to 1,800 degrees at smelters — a process that, without proper controls, releases harmful levels of heavy-metal byproducts including lead, cadmium and arsenic into the atmosphere.
As output booms, the industry is developing new pipelines to bring oil and gas to market, export terminals to ship liquefied natural gas overseas and petrochemical plants to take advantage of cheap petroleum byproducts.
The clams provide algae with a place to live and photosynthesize, and in exchange, algae gives the clam byproducts of photosynthesis, such as sugars, which enables the giant clams to grow, you know, giant.
Where before people had been aware of the waste they and their food produced, returning its nutrients (and less beneficial byproducts) to the soil, a culture of "flush and forget" permanently changed attitudes towards waste.
The new process isn't just better in terms of producing hazardous byproducts, it's also cheaper according to MIT, which provides an additional incentive for commercializing it and applying it to more metals than just antimony.
Orlando's municipal utility has been hit with a proposed class action accusing it of polluting the homes of more than 30,000 residents with toxic byproducts from a coal-fired power plant southeast of the city.
Calves begin their lives grazing pastures, then transition to grain formulas that include up to 25 ingredients, everything from olives to byproducts from Japanese breweries, but never any chemical additives that decrease the farming time.
Mining the metal creates toxic byproducts that pollute the soil and water and the refining process to turn it into a can uses a lot of electricity, disrupts natural waterways and can wipe out forests.
This includes waste disposal companies like Waste Management that want to preserve landfill space and reduce methane emissions, forestry companies looking for new forms of lumber byproducts and livestock companies looking to dispose of manure.
They point out that protein powders and supplements, which come from animal products like whey and casein (byproducts of cheese manufacturing) or from plants like soy, rice, pea or hemp, are a relatively new invention.
Both the show and the zine are byproducts of networked collaborations via social media that have become a vital platform for celebrating the rich artistic, experiential, and geographic diversity among these and other Latinx artists.
This crucial part of the U.S. manufacturing sector uses byproducts from oil and natural gas to make the building blocks for the products Americans use on a daily basis, from water bottles to pill coatings.
"One of the restrictions about baiting in Wisconsin is you can't use animals or animal byproducts—no meat," study author Dr. Becky Kirby, who led the research while at the University of Wisconsin, Madison told Gizmodo.
The rest of Smith's post has nothing to do with the benefits of a warming climate per se, but touting how the "use of fossil fuels and the byproducts of carbon enrichment" has improved everyone's lives.
The aromatics unit for which Honeywell UOP's technology is being considered under one of the MoUs, would convert benzene and paraxylene, byproducts of gasoline production, into 2 million tons annually of feedstocks for chemicals and plastics.
"We support reasonable regulations for coal ash and non-coal-ash byproducts that protect health and the environment," said Michelle Bloodworth, president and chief executive of the American Coalition for Clean Coal Electricity, an industry group.
Viruses, ransomware and other malicious byproducts of the Internet era historically have been a bigger threat to Windows computers and Android phones, but the increased market share of Apple products have made them more popular targets.
Under the deal, China's largest state-owned energy giant would spend nearly $84 billion over 20 years to build facilities that extract natural gas and turn it into byproducts that generate power and make consumer goods.
Under the deal, China's largest state-owned energy giant would spend nearly $11396203393554595843 billion over 20 years to build facilities that extract natural gas and turn it into byproducts that generate power and make consumer goods.
Under the current linear system, food enters cities where it is processed or consumed and only a small portion of the resulting organic waste, in the form of discarded food, byproducts or sewage, gets used again.
"The United States has world-class drinking water standards for more than 90 contaminants, including microorganisms, disinfectants, disinfection byproducts, inorganic and organic chemicals, and radionuclides-providing Americans safe and healthy water to drink," the EPA said.
Some of those are a legacy of the war in Afghanistan, in which some Bangladeshis fought; others are byproducts of the Wahhabi influence that Bangladeshi workers in the Persian Gulf brought back when they returned home.
Evans said disinfection byproducts, on the other hand, are more prevalent in surface-water systems, which include lakes and streams, because those systems are legally required to add a disinfectant like chlorine to the water supply.
To avoid dumping these poisonous byproducts by hand, gangs rope together barrels and jerry cans containing the toxic waste in the back of their vans and then tie one end of the rope to a tree.
"We know that the toxic waste byproducts of nuclear plants are not worth the risks of the technology's benefit, especially in light of lessons learned from the Fukushima meltdown and the Chernobyl disaster," Sanders's plan says.
Filed Tuesday, just three days after the third-strongest earthquake in state history, the lawsuit seeks immediate reduction in wastewater injections into deep wells used to dispose of byproducts from oil and gas drilling and extraction.
The exhibition's title concept, an allusion to Robert Smithson's 1968 essay "A Sedimentation of the Mind," captures the sense in which visual art can function as a metaphorical geologic record of human activity and its byproducts.
It also does not factor in the impact of the Trump Administration's multiple-front trade fights this year with many top agricultural markets on global exports of corn-related byproducts, such as ethanol and distillers dried grains.
But the true nature of the test may not be revealed until results are back from atmospheric testing, usually conducted by Air Force planes that run along the North Korean coast "sniffing" for byproducts of an explosion.
The joint venture will have two units - one in Houston and the other in Geneva - with a focus on bulk liquid chemicals such as sulphur byproducts from smelting rather than typical petrochemicals that are used in plastics.
In line with other miners reporting this month, Glasenberg said there were "emerging inflationary pressures," but they had been offset so far by strong prices for byproducts, such as cobalt, and Glencore was able to contain costs.
"China is not the most important market (for Brazil), but in value it's quite important as it takes all the byproducts," Pan said, adding that importers are likely to negotiate with suppliers to share the deposit fees.
Cities would need to source food produced locally in ways that regenerate the ecosystem, distribute the surplus to those who cannot afford it, and turn byproducts into new products from fertilizer to feed to materials for bioenergy.
The joint venture will have two units - one in Houston and the other in Geneva - with a focus on bulk liquid chemicals such as sulfur byproducts from smelting rather than typical petrochemicals that are used in plastics.
They received a supply of ACTH from a division of the Armour meatpacking plant in Chicago, which had begun marketing Dial soap in 1948 and was looking for other ways to sell byproducts of the slaughtering process.
And let me tell you something, folks, people are driving across that border with tons, tons, hear me, tons of everything from byproducts for methamphetamine to cocaine to heroin and it's all coming up through corrupt Mexico.
Extra virgin olive oil (but not regular olive oil) produced the lowest levels of trans fats and other potentially harmful byproducts when heated to temperatures even higher than those commonly used for sauteing, deep-frying and baking.
For the toast, Mr. Fox decided to use pain de mie — a soft, mild white bread — made with byproducts he had on hand: schmaltz, which is seasoned, rendered chicken fat, and whey from the restaurant's homemade ricotta.
For now, the government is keeping in place its "three strict bans": on the import and export of rhinos, tigers and their byproducts; on their sale; and on the medical use of rhino horns and tiger bones.
To manufacture this all-purpose food, companies have long mixed plant-based carbohydrates with byproducts from the meat industry (like organs) that might otherwise end up in a landfill where they would decompose and emit greenhouse gases.
Stanton said the U.S. market for pork byproducts used for medical, pet food and non-food purposes stands at more than $100 billion, and that excludes any potential market for animal-to-human transplants, known as xenotransplants.
Anthony Marchese is the chairman of Texas Mineral Resources, a publicly traded firm which is developing a heavy rare earth project in Texas as well as reclaiming strategic minerals from coal waste and other environmentally sensitive byproducts.
The strike on three facilities, one in Damascus and two in Homs, may have temporarily halted production of agents like sarin, but others like chlorine are easy to obtain industrial byproducts that can be deployed with little effort.
"We're dealing with a changing landscape with a lot of byproducts between what's happening in the housing market — which we like the fundamentals — as well as new policy and legislation that can change the commercial environment," said Wetenhall.
The basics to his invention are as follows: a prepared, baked meringue product that is free from any egg or egg byproducts, formed from a mixture consisting essentially of a saponin-rich component, a sugar component and water.
The Atomic Energy Act gives the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission the sole power to regulate radiation safety standards for milling uranium ore and disposing of waste byproducts known as tailings, key steps in the production of nuclear fuel.
A smart tax differentiates among the very different chemical entities called "oil," accounts for GHG emissions along the entire oil supply chain, and includes byproducts that do not fuel transport, thereby correcting the shortcomings of a blunt tax.
The London-listed company posted record earnings for January-June — building on 2017 full-year results it said were the best yet — but also that higher costs and lower prices for cobalt and other byproducts ate into profits.
As it turns out, after centuries of enslavement and state violence against black people, decades of plunder of black wealth and resources, and herding black people into the least desirable neighborhoods, the byproducts of poverty and trauma emerge.
BUENOS AIRES, March 9 (Reuters) - Argentine farmers began a four-day strike on Monday to protest the government's hike on export taxes for soybeans and its byproducts, though shipments were not impacted in the major global food exporter.
The drivers behind OPEC's forecast include steadily rising economic activity around the world, strong demand for transportation fuels like gasoline and jet fuel and a growing petrochemical industry, which turns byproducts from oil and natural gas into chemicals.
But on top of that 18 percent tax, the three products will now be slapped with an additional levy of 4 pesos per export dollar, bringing the effective tax hike on soybeans and byproducts to 3 percentage points.
The surge in U.S. oil and gas production in recent years has benefited a range of manufacturers by creating a low-cost supply of domestic fossil fuels, as well as the petroleum byproducts on which many manufacturers rely.
According to a draft study by CDM Smith, the city was adjusting pH levels to reduce cancer-causing compounds like trihalomethanes and haloacetic acids — byproducts of the disinfectants large water systems like Newark use to eliminate harmful microbes.
You can stick plastic in a furnace and burn it at high temperatures, but that process is energy intensive, polluting, and results in a slew of nasty byproducts that are often just as hard to degrade as polyethylene itself.
Rather than risking contamination from intestinal pathogens—like E. Coli and Salmonella—that can plague the meat industry today, divorcing meat production (and its byproducts like gelatin) from livestock-raising could be a food safety advocate's dream come true.
Instead, Schmidt and Frank propose searching for more subtle signals, such as byproducts of fossil fuel consumption, mass extinction events, plastic pollution, synthetic materials, disrupted sedimentation from agricultural development or deforestation, and radioactive isotopes potentially caused by nuclear detonations.
That, in turn, has raised fears that a conservation-minded city would no longer be able to control or even know if its waste were simply being dumped in a landfill or incinerated, sending hazardous byproducts into the atmosphere.
RIO DE JANEIRO (Reuters) - Brazilian federal prosecutors are seeking the arrest of a Vale SA senior executive, authorities said on Friday, following the collapse of a dam holding mining byproducts that is believed to have killed over 300 people.
As International Business Times points out, weed and its byproducts are good for everything from making jewelry to feeding birds—and, if worse comes to worst, growers could always just give it away in exchange for a city cleanup.
Because wolves are objectively the fucking coolest furry animals aside from Ewoks, the situation has devolved into quite the controversy, with many environmental organizations arguing that wolves are being scapegoated and murdered for the destructive byproducts of industrial activities.
Hiatt also faults Sanders' aim to eliminate nuclear energy, which currently powers around 20 percent of the country without emitting any heat-trapping carbon dioxide (Sanders has long-despised nuclear waste — whose deadly byproducts are amassing around the nation).
The Atomic Energy Act (AEA) gives the federal Nuclear Regulatory Commission the sole power to regulate radiation safety standards for milling uranium ore and disposing of waste byproducts known as tailings, key steps in the production of nuclear fuel.
This would have been a deal-breaker for me and the Effexor had it not been balanced by the four-leaf clover of medicinal byproducts—one so rare I had to read it twice to believe it myself: loss of appetite.
Cognizant picked mostly white-collar jobs for the index, but several jobs outside that category are also good candidates for the list, too, either because they're byproducts of the tech industry or because they are difficult to automate with today's technology.
Pee itself has really low levels of bacteria and isn't likely to make you sick, but when it reacts with disinfectants like chlorine, chemical byproducts are formed that can irritate your eyes (you've felt the sting) and lungs—hello pool cough.
One of the byproducts of the reckoning currently being faced in Hollywood and beyond in the aftermath of the Harvey Weinstein scandal is that we are finally coming to understand that the systemic power imbalance that dominates our culture has consequences.
As investors increasingly focus on sustainability, including the avoidance of any dangerous accumulations of waste, Bridgen said Ferro-Alloy was aiming for zero waste, with byproducts sold to China and Kazakhstan and other material being made into bricks for building.
RIO DE JANEIRO, Feb 22 (Reuters) - Brazilian prosecutors are seeking the arrest of a Vale SA senior executive, authorities said on Friday, following the collapse of a dam holding mining byproducts that is believed to have killed over 300 people.
After over a decade of Bachelor and its byproducts, our learned "instincts" for a dating show include expecting loads of drama, cutaway interviews with cast-members, and a built-in sense of direction — is this couple headed toward the aisle?
After a hurricane swell that dominated much of Wednesday, I discovered in the bathroom that I had passed a few large blood clots, which a phone call with my midwife later led me to understand were the byproducts of the pregnancy.
CALGARY, Alberta (Reuters) - More than 120 birds in Canada's oil heartland of Alberta were killed after getting caught in a pond of oil sands byproducts operated by the country's largest producer, Suncor Energy Inc, the local regulator said on Tuesday.
Thomas Henle, a chemistry professor at Dresden University of Technology in Germany who was not involved with the study, has wondered whether humans also have unique genetic mutations to better handle, or even take advantage of, byproducts of fire in food.
Roughly half of the victims of gun violence in the United States are black men, and the stories of their deaths are often enmeshed with realities shaped by poverty, unemployment, poor education, mass incarceration, and other byproducts of institutional racism.
The video went viral, earning 23 million views as culture vultures relished in Culkin's rare embrace of the character which defined his childhood, led anonymous internet people to make hoaxes about his death, and caused other distasteful byproducts of childhood celebrity.
"I view these disinfection byproducts as roughly the equivalent of secondhand smoke — they're things that just don't have to be there," said Ernest Blatchley, a professor of environmental engineering at Purdue University who was not involved in the new study.
The complaint said that he was "duped by Burger King's deceptive practices into eating a meat-free Whopper Patty that was in fact covered in meat byproducts," though it did not specify how he came to know this was the case.
Of course, there are unfortunate byproducts: exposure of U.S. intelligence-gathering protocols and procedures, intensifying the partisan warfare in the U.S. over the integrity of our intelligence work, and abetting Russia's aggressive efforts to exacerbate the turmoil in U.S. politics.
Daily, I have to recall a thousand, a million things I don't need to—what shirt I wore to a beach rave in 2007, the names of chemical byproducts in the adenylyl cyclase pathway, the ear bones of a frog.
New technologies and approaches are being developed to cut down on concrete's environmental downsides — including utilizing industrial byproducts to reduce cement usage, recycling existing concrete, producing self-healing concretes that reduce the need for new concrete, and creating entirely new materials.
These molecules include the genetic material packed inside most every cell—the sum total of which is known as the genome—but they also include the unique proteins each cell is programmed to make, as well as a cell's chemical byproducts or metabolites.
A study published in April in the journal Environmental Science & Technology found that when those chemicals mix with "human inputs" -- the stuff people add to the water when they get in, such as sweat, urine and cosmetics -- they form compounds called disinfection byproducts.
U.S. shipments of byproducts affected by the duties fell by about a third in April and May combined, after China imposed the first 25 percent tariff on American pork in April, according to the latest data from the U.S. Department of Agriculture.
Quarterback controversies at Alabama, Clemson and Georgia — currently the country's top three ranked teams, which together have contested the last three national title games — are the inevitable byproducts of the novel strategies they have deployed to make themselves college football's best programs.
Dog owners turn to plant-based foods for ethical, environmental and health reasons, noting that byproducts from mistreated or diseased livestock sometimes make it into foods and that animal agriculture is a leading source of greenhouse gases requiring copious amounts of water.
Said scandal involves DuPont, the chemical company, which put the lie to its "Better living through chemistry" slogan by poisoning the residents of Parkersburg, a West Virginia town and home to one of its plants, with the byproducts used to make Teflon.
SÃO PAULO (Reuters) - The number of ships waiting to berth at Brazilian ports to load soybeans and its byproducts is currently almost 60 percent larger than in the same period last year, according to data from shipping agency Williams compiled by Reuters.
How can you trust anything when they were part and parcel of that investigation, and then you&aposre going to trust the byproducts of that investigation that there was some kind of impartiality or fairness in the process when you&aposve seen now the bias?
One of the oldest yet most persistent of these unsubstantiated notions is that failure to empty one's bowels each and every day can result in so-called autointoxication – the absorption of poisonous substances produced from partially digested food and food byproducts in the intestines.
Compression tights have also been said to increase circulation, helping to oxygenate blood and remove toxic byproducts, thusly improving performance and recovery, but research on those effects hasn't managed to rule out the possibility that the small gains some wearers demonstrate is placebo at work.
If packers do not sell them elsewhere for human consumption, the byproducts will be rendered in the United States for about 18 cents per pound - a decrease equating to a loss of $1.55 per hog for the volume exported to China, the federation said.
The tax increase that Argentina is set to impose on exports of soy and its byproducts will drive down farm investment and likely result in smaller harvests going forward, farmers and economists said on Wednesday, a day after the new tax policy was announced.
In addition to avoiding meat, vegans take their diet a step further than vegetarians because they cut out all animal byproducts including protein-rich foods like eggs, Greek yogurt, and certain brands of dry-roasted peanuts that contain gelatin, which is made from animal collagen.
Companies like ExxonMobil, Shell, and Saudi Aramco are ramping up output of plastic — which is made from oil and gas, and their byproducts — to hedge against the possibility that a serious global response to climate change might reduce demand for their fuels, analysts say.
Yes, as the designer Stuart Vevers said backstage after the show, these skins are byproducts of the meat industry, but yes, leather production is also chemical-intensive, and if you're going to feel bad for the animals, maybe you should think about their habitat, too.
The study doesn't pinpoint which of the chemicals caused the damage, but makes some suggestions: Some aromatic amines, chemicals also found in tobacco smoke and industrial byproducts, disrupt the endocrine system, and some dyes have been found to induce tumors in rats' mammary glands.
Aside from a resounding "ew" from the media, the only thing scientists are worried about is that some nitrogenous compounds present in pee—such as urea or ammonia—can interact with a swimming pool's chlorine to create disinfection byproducts (DBPs), as reported in a 2014 paper.
Eventually the team will replace its plastic molds with state-of-the-art steel or aluminum in order to mass produce the product and will experiment with incorporating other natural fibers and byproducts of different beers, such as stouts and IPAs to continue improving the rings.
The dam, which held back mining byproducts, is owned by nickel and iron ore miner Vale SA. Around 200 residents were evacuated from an area near another tailings dam operated by Vale late on Saturday, amid fears that it was structurally weak and could also collapse.
The company attributes its blue color to a particular combination of calcium salts and metal oxides—byproducts of ash from burning coal at a local thermal power station—that dissolve in the two- to six-feet-deep reservoir after being fed through a series of pipes.
Indeed, one of the most significant byproducts of the ACA is that it helped end "job lock," allowing many workers who felt anchored to a job because of a benefits package to go into business for themselves since they could no longer be denied health insurance.
Unbuttoned The Met Gala, the celebrity-studded style juggernaut and party masterminded by Anna Wintour and dressed up as a cultural and philanthropic event, which dominated the conversation at the start of the week (along with, to be fair, the Indiana primary), has spawned many byproducts.
When we normalize question asking, we are telling employees that it's okay to not know the answerIn order to prevent the byproducts of imposter syndrome from adversely affecting the company's bottom line, leaders have a responsibility to address it and support employees who suffer from it.
Nearly 70 percent of the island's water customers received their tap water from systems that were found to have unlawfully high levels of contaminants like coliform bacteria, volatile organic compounds and harmful byproducts of disinfection, or that were not treating their water in accord with federal standards.
Aside from the obvious security problems posed by these platforms (and I include the ones I do use, like Linkedin and Twitter), one of the worst byproducts has been the habit of pinning individuals to precisely what they do, say and believe in one discreet period of time.
Like the other analog goods that have seen a resurgence in recent years, including vinyl records, board games, and even film cameras, books promised a slower, isolated experience, free from distractions, pop-up ads, dead batteries, Russians (unless you're reading about them), and the other byproducts of digital innovation.
At the same time, it underscores how Stripe is leveraging the huge amount of data that it has amassed about its users and payments on the platform: It's not just about enabling single services, but about using the byproducts of those services — data — to put fuel into new products.
"The Chinese government has not changed its stance on wildlife protection and will not ease the crackdown on illegal trafficking and trade of rhinos, tigers and their byproducts," Ding Xuedong, a top official with the council, said in remarks published in the state-run news media on Monday.
"When a second inaudible ultrasonic source interfered with the primary inaudible ultrasonic source, intermodulation distortion created audible byproducts that share spectral characteristics with audio from the AP news," the university report said...."We wondered for a moment if someone might be playing a joke on us," they wrote in their report.
Hardline critics argue that to be truly sustainable means abandoning animal byproducts completely and immediately, but Daveu's strategy is to convince current suppliers to switch to sustainable cattle farming techniques while looking for new technology that'll replicate the look, feel, and durability of leather through lab-grown proteins or recycled materials.
The court noted that its decision to overturn a lower court's ruling and permit the fetal remains law, which among other provisions bars the incineration of fetal remains alongside surgical byproducts, was not based on the "undue burden" test that has formed the crux of many challenges to restrictive abortion laws.
The Vitrima has an edge over Kúla's products, reflecting its action sports credentials: By sealing the unit, it means it's far easier to clean the lenses when they invariably get covered in snow, mud, water or whatever else the byproducts of your no doubt tech-unfriendly extreme sports life might be.
It placed a high priority on transferring energy generation from fossil fuels (carbon removed from the atmosphere before humans evolved and buried ever since deep underground) to sources in the present-day ecosystem including forest-derived biomass (brush, trimmings and other byproducts of scientific and complex sustainable forest management practices).
Hawaii is on the front lines of climate change, so much so that in September, President Barack Obama used it as the base from which to discuss his legacy on the issue, as well as the continued threat from rising seas, extreme weather and other byproducts of a warming planet.
Over the last four years, United States customs officials have seized around 17,300 "ruminant byproducts" at airports across the country and land crossings along the Canadian border — a total that includes haggis as well as other types of animal imports, including certain goat and elk products, according to agency records.
A 2013 study by local Ardhi University, 'Heavy metals concentrations in selected areas used for urban agriculture in Dar es Salaam', suggested that the discharge of chemical byproducts into the city's creeks and valley streams had led to unacceptable levels of heavy metals such as lead, cadmium, copper and chromium.
The paper added that firms and activists alike credit the BBC's Blue Planet II, which featured a pilot whale calf who died after allegedly ingesting chemical byproducts of plastic waste, for raising awareness around the issue—though bans on plastic microbeads and charges for plastic bags have already gone into effect in England.
Wernick and his UCLA cohorts think they can take biofuels to the next level by engineering bacteria (Bacillus subtilis) to be more efficient at breaking down the proteins in human excrement, as well as other protein-rich waste such as wastewater algae and all the byproducts from fermenting wine, ethanol, and beer.
I found that that, coupled with the people who are physically affected by the byproducts of the Internet and our connected world — the signals and that sort of thing, and that's why they chose to live where they live — I thought those were interesting choices to show the dark side of the Internet.
"Flint hired Veolia nearly one full year after the change in water source, and the focus of Veolia's analysis, at Flint's direction, was only to help the city address concerns about the levels of disinfection byproducts (TTHM), discoloration, and taste-and-odor issues related to the drinking water treatment process," the statement said.
It follows that the same words you'd expect to see in a breaking-news report about a catastrophic oil spill should not be in the same sentence, let alone the same ingredients list, as your skin care — but you'll see petroleum and its most common cosmetic byproducts, like mineral oil and petrolatum, used both ways.
A metallurgist commissioned by Motherboard editor-at-large Brian Merchant estimated that roughly 75 pounds worth of raw material have to be mined to make the average iPhone, and that's before considering other environmental byproducts of Apple's global supply chain, which include, of course, shipping the raw material as well as the finished product all over the world.
In 2050, your average trip to a sushi joint will most likely be demonstrably worse in one of two ways thanks to climate change: It'll either be ruinously expensive for those outside the One Percent—particularly if you enjoy tuna—or you'll be gobbling down all-you-can-eat sushi made of mostly unrecognizable fish byproducts.
The members of the Cercle d'Art des Travailleurs de Plantation Congolaise (the Congolese Plantation Workers Art League, or CATPC), who are paid less than living wages for their work harvesting cocoa and other crops destined for foreign markets, have found a unique answer to this question by turning the byproducts of their labor into contemporary art that can supplement their incomes.
Related: Peruvian Activists Predict a Right-Wing President Will Bring More Conflicts Over Mines The drastic measures have been triggered by a wave of illegal gold mining in the area that has seen as many as 100,000 miners destroy vast swathes of the Amazon, ravage river ecosystems with dredgers, and poison the water table with mercury and other mining byproducts.
When it comes to specifically vaping e-liquids, she said, "even these components that seem like they should be safe, we have no idea what they do once they're heated up, aerosolized and broken down into their byproducts, and what effect those have, especially when they're broken down into teeny tiny ultrafine particles that can go into deep parts of the lung."
The first "Smoke and Fumes" installment documented how leading researchers had verified the effects of carbon dioxide and other byproducts of burning oil, gas and coal on the atmosphere by the 1950s; the second, released in May, showed how the industry had explored technologies to reduce emissions in the 1960s—but ultimately decided to raise doubts about the science of climate change instead.
All in the course of debating a question that may alter the trajectory of the American conservative movement—whether events like Drag Queen Story Hour should be tolerated by conservatives as the byproducts of a free and pluralistic society or whether conservatives should see in the construction of glitter wands and paper bag puppets a societal sickness grave enough to warrant the abandonment of classical liberalism.
The Philadelphia 76ers gave up 24-year-old Dario Saric and 393-year-old Robert Covington—two "Process" byproducts who helped round out the 2017-18 season's most dominant five-man unit—along with Jerryd Bayless and a second-round pick for Butler and Justin Patton, a seven-footer with zero games of NBA experience who recently broke his foot for the second time since he was drafted.
Similar to author and activist Leslie Feinberg's references in Stone Butch Blues (1993) and the anthology Transgender Warriors: Making History from Joan of Arc to Dennis Rodman (1996) to the alternative gender systems of the Navajo and other Indigenous tribes, Wojnarowicz provides a flash of what a world without the killing machine of America and its ideological byproducts would look like if white gays could reach out to others in the death space with reciprocity.
I just finished reading a great book called The Age of Anger by Pankaj Mishra, which is all about a two- or three-century history of modernity, economic modernity and consumer capitalism, and one of its byproducts being the widespread sense among those who aren't among the small fraction of people who profit from it that they've been cheated in some way, that they've been left behind or defrauded or lied to.
A publication by the National Institutes of Health and the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism titled Alcohol: A Women's Health Issue explains that "a woman's brain and other organs are exposed to more alcohol and to more of the toxic byproducts that result when the body breaks down and eliminates alcohol" based on the assumption that women weigh less than men and have less water in their bodies to disperse the alcohol.
In early 2011, as American forces were packing up to leave Iraq after eight years of fighting and occupying, one of the war's most hideous byproducts was lurching toward what appeared to be certain death: Al Qaeda in Iraq, which had recently renamed itself the Islamic State in Iraq, had seen most of its leaders killed and its membership whittled to a handful of dead-enders, who were huddled in sanctuaries in and around the northern city of Mosul.

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