|
Definition of Salsola soda
1. Noun. Bushy plant of Old World salt marshes and sea beaches having prickly leaves; burned to produce a crude soda ash.
Generic synonyms: Bush, Shrub
Lexicographical Neighbors of Salsola Soda
Literary usage of Salsola soda
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Chemical Technology; Or, Chemistry in Its Applications to the Arts and by Edmund Ronalds, Thomas Richardson, Henry Watts, Friedrich Ludwig Knapp (1863)
"... is procured from the Salsola soda, which is cultivated for this purpose.
The plants are raised from seed, which is sown at the close of the year, ..."
2. A System of Chemistry for the Use of Students of Medicine by Franklin Bache (1819)
"Thus the salsola soda furnishes CHAP. I. very nearly 20 per cent, ... Lime.
every plant, which has hitherto been examined, except the salsola soda. ..."
3. A System of Chemistry by Thomas Thomson (1817)
"One-hundred parts of the salsola soda, for instance, yield 19*921 of ashes; and
these contain 1-992 parts of soda; some of which, however, is combined with ..."
4. Elements of Chemistry: In the Order of the Lectures Given in Yale College by Benjamin Silliman (1830)
"The crude soda of commerce, called barilla, is the incinerated salsola soda:
kelp, a coarser variety, is the incinerated sea weed, and often contains only ..."
5. A System of Chemistry for the Use of Students of Medicine by Franklin Bache (1819)
"Thus the salsola soda furnishes CHAP. i. very nearly 2O per cent, ... Lime.
every plant, which has hitherto been examined, except the salsola soda. ..."
6. The Elements of Chemistry by Thomas Thomson (1810)
"Indeed it is a very uncommon thing to find a plant entirely destitute of lime :
salsola soda is almost the only one in which we know for certain that this ..."
7. Materia Indica, Or, Some Account of Those Articles which are Employed by the by Whitelaw Ainslie (1826)
"The plant does not differ materially from the salsola soda, already mentioned j
and which, by » In the days of Pliny, a mineral alkali appears to have been ..."
8. Chemical Technology; Or, Chemistry in Its Applications to the Arts and by Edmund Ronalds, Thomas Richardson, Henry Watts, Friedrich Ludwig Knapp (1863)
"... is procured from the Salsola soda, which is cultivated for this purpose.
The plants are raised from seed, which is sown at the close of the year, ..."
9. A System of Chemistry for the Use of Students of Medicine by Franklin Bache (1819)
"Thus the salsola soda furnishes CHAP. I. very nearly 20 per cent, ... Lime.
every plant, which has hitherto been examined, except the salsola soda. ..."
10. A System of Chemistry by Thomas Thomson (1817)
"One-hundred parts of the salsola soda, for instance, yield 19*921 of ashes; and
these contain 1-992 parts of soda; some of which, however, is combined with ..."
11. Elements of Chemistry: In the Order of the Lectures Given in Yale College by Benjamin Silliman (1830)
"The crude soda of commerce, called barilla, is the incinerated salsola soda:
kelp, a coarser variety, is the incinerated sea weed, and often contains only ..."
12. A System of Chemistry for the Use of Students of Medicine by Franklin Bache (1819)
"Thus the salsola soda furnishes CHAP. i. very nearly 2O per cent, ... Lime.
every plant, which has hitherto been examined, except the salsola soda. ..."
13. The Elements of Chemistry by Thomas Thomson (1810)
"Indeed it is a very uncommon thing to find a plant entirely destitute of lime :
salsola soda is almost the only one in which we know for certain that this ..."
14. Materia Indica, Or, Some Account of Those Articles which are Employed by the by Whitelaw Ainslie (1826)
"The plant does not differ materially from the salsola soda, already mentioned j
and which, by » In the days of Pliny, a mineral alkali appears to have been ..."