lime burning การใช้
- Lime kilns are the kilns used for lime burning and slaking.
- This was used for lime burning up until 1924 / 25.
- The kiln at Llanymynech was used for lime burning.
- Their traditional occupations are fishing in backwaters, lime burning and salt panning.
- Stone has been quarried for lime burning, as well as for building and road making.
- Lime burning became an important industry.
- This area of the Polden Hills was used for quarrying stone and lime burning from 1888 until 1973.
- All the companies had lime burning facilities and agricultural lime was supplied, by rail, to outlets in Lincolnshire.
- Solva became the main trading centre of St Bride's Bay in the medieval period, and was important for lime burning.
- Lumbering supplied white and red oak staves for both the lime burning business in Saint John and the rum and molasses trade in the West Indies.
- It had lime kilns in the Roman period, and was used for quarrying building stone and rock for lime burning until the end of the nineteenth century.
- A walk along this stream to the Roman Wall, shows that it must have been a hive of industry with quarries, coal mining and lime burning kilns.
- Lime burning required large quantities of coal, but nothing suitable was available on the Broomhill estate, and Elgin was dependent on supplies from workings at Pitfirrane and Urquhart.
- Because lime burning was still in not fully developed, the builders mixed the mortar with horsehair, quark, goat's milk and ox blood to harden it fully.
- Born at Disley in Cheshire, he had interests in coal-mining, particularly in the Hyde areas of Greater Manchester, as well as lime burning and mineral extraction interests.
- Around 1917 a lime burning business started at Ootann ( 13 km south of Almaden ), using old kilns used during the construction of the railway, and a siding was installed about 1918.
- This kiln still exists and is one of three that were purpose-built for lime burning left in the UK : another is located at Langcliffe in Yorkshire, another is located at Llanymynech Limeworks.
- Prior to the opening of the Montgomery Canal ( then known as the Ellesmere Canal ) in 1796, limestone quarrying was undertaken on the site on a relatively small scale, although lime kilns for lime burning appear to have been within the quarry from at least 1753.
- Although by no means evidence of the earliest lime burning undertaken at Moreton Bay, they are rare surviving 19th century lime kiln remains which provide important information about the process and role of lime manufacture in Queensland, and have the potential to contribute to more exhaustive studies on these topics, to the analysis of kiln type, and to our general understanding of Queensland history.