Sample records for cordage

  1. 49 CFR 393.102 - What are the minimum performance criteria for cargo securement devices and systems?

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-10-01

    ... chains, wire rope, steel strapping, synthetic webbing, and cordage) and other attachment or fastening... acceleration in a lateral direction. (2) Working Load limit. Tiedown assemblies (including chains, wire rope, steel strapping, synthetic webbing, and cordage) and other attachment or fastening devices used to...

  2. 49 CFR 393.102 - What are the minimum performance criteria for cargo securement devices and systems?

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-10-01

    ... chains, wire rope, steel strapping, synthetic webbing, and cordage) and other attachment or fastening... acceleration in a lateral direction. (2) Working Load limit. Tiedown assemblies (including chains, wire rope, steel strapping, synthetic webbing, and cordage) and other attachment or fastening devices used to...

  3. 49 CFR 393.102 - What are the minimum performance criteria for cargo securement devices and systems?

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-10-01

    ... chains, wire rope, steel strapping, synthetic webbing, and cordage) and other attachment or fastening..., steel strapping, synthetic webbing, and cordage) and other attachment or fastening devices used to... contained within the structure of the vehicle. Securement systems must provide a downward force equivalent...

  4. 49 CFR 393.102 - What are the minimum performance criteria for cargo securement devices and systems?

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR

    2014-10-01

    ... chains, wire rope, steel strapping, synthetic webbing, and cordage) and other attachment or fastening..., steel strapping, synthetic webbing, and cordage) and other attachment or fastening devices used to... contained within the structure of the vehicle. Securement systems must provide a downward force equivalent...

  5. 49 CFR 393.102 - What are the minimum performance criteria for cargo securement devices and systems?

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-10-01

    ... chains, wire rope, steel strapping, synthetic webbing, and cordage) and other attachment or fastening..., steel strapping, synthetic webbing, and cordage) and other attachment or fastening devices used to... contained within the structure of the vehicle. Securement systems must provide a downward force equivalent...

  6. 37 CFR 6.2 - Prior U.S. schedule of classes of goods and services.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR

    2014-07-01

    ... and polishing materials. 5 Adhesives. 6 Chemicals and chemical compositions. 7 Cordage. 8 Smokers... Fertilizers. 11 Inks and inking materials. 12 Construction materials. 13 Hardware and plumbing and...

  7. 37 CFR 6.2 - Prior U.S. schedule of classes of goods and services.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-07-01

    ... and polishing materials. 5 Adhesives. 6 Chemicals and chemical compositions. 7 Cordage. 8 Smokers... Fertilizers. 11 Inks and inking materials. 12 Construction materials. 13 Hardware and plumbing and...

  8. 37 CFR 6.2 - Prior U.S. schedule of classes of goods and services.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-07-01

    ... and polishing materials. 5 Adhesives. 6 Chemicals and chemical compositions. 7 Cordage. 8 Smokers... Fertilizers. 11 Inks and inking materials. 12 Construction materials. 13 Hardware and plumbing and...

  9. 37 CFR 6.2 - Prior U.S. schedule of classes of goods and services.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-07-01

    ... and polishing materials. 5 Adhesives. 6 Chemicals and chemical compositions. 7 Cordage. 8 Smokers... Fertilizers. 11 Inks and inking materials. 12 Construction materials. 13 Hardware and plumbing and...

  10. Non-Invasive Tension Measurement Devices for Parachute Cordage

    NASA Technical Reports Server (NTRS)

    Litteken, Douglas A.; Daum, Jared S.

    2016-01-01

    The need for lightweight and non-intrusive tension measurements has arisen alongside the development of high-fidelity computer models of textile and fluid dynamics. In order to validate these computer models, data must be gathered in the operational environment without altering the design, construction, or performance of the test article. Current measurement device designs rely on severing a cord and breaking the load path to introduce a load cell. These load cells are very reliable, but introduce an area of high stiffness in the load path, directly affecting the structural response, adding excessive weight, and possibly altering the dynamics of the parachute during a test. To capture the required data for analysis validation without affecting the response of the system, non-invasive measurement devices have been developed and tested by NASA. These tension measurement devices offer minimal impact to the mass, form, fit, and function of the test article, while providing reliable, axial tension measurements for parachute cordage.

  11. Viscoelastic properties of kenaf bast fiber in relation to stem age

    USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database

    Natural fibers traditionally used for cordage are proving valuable for advanced industrial applications due in part to beneficial physical and chemical properties, but also because they are a renewable and biodegradable resource. Kenaf (Hibiscus cannabinus L., Malvaceae) produces high yields of lig...

  12. 33 CFR 164.03 - Incorporation by reference.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-07-01

    ... inspection at the Navigation Systems Division (CG-553), Coast Guard Headquarters, 2100 2nd St. SW., Stop 7580, Washington, DC 20593-7580 and at the National Archives and Records Administration (NARA). For information on... Testing Fiber Ropes 164.74 Cordage Institute, 350 Lincoln Street, Hingham, MA 02043 CIA-3, Standard Test...

  13. 48 CFR 52.204-4 - Printed or Copied Double-Sided on Postconsumer Fiber Content Paper.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2013 CFR

    2013-10-01

    ... boxes; old newspapers; old magazines; mixed waste paper; tabulating cards; and used cordage; or (2) All paper, paperboard, and fibrous materials that enter and are collected from municipal solid waste; but... practicable, when not using electronic commerce methods to submit information or data to the Government. (End...

  14. 48 CFR 52.204-4 - Printed or Copied Double-Sided on Postconsumer Fiber Content Paper.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2012 CFR

    2012-10-01

    ... boxes; old newspapers; old magazines; mixed waste paper; tabulating cards; and used cordage; or (2) All paper, paperboard, and fibrous materials that enter and are collected from municipal solid waste; but... practicable, when not using electronic commerce methods to submit information or data to the Government. (End...

  15. 48 CFR 52.204-4 - Printed or Copied Double-Sided on Postconsumer Fiber Content Paper.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2014 CFR

    2014-10-01

    ... boxes; old newspapers; old magazines; mixed waste paper; tabulating cards; and used cordage; or (2) All paper, paperboard, and fibrous materials that enter and are collected from municipal solid waste; but... practicable, when not using electronic commerce methods to submit information or data to the Government. (End...

  16. 33 CFR 164.03 - Incorporation by reference.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-07-01

    ... inspection at the Navigation Systems Division (CG-5413), Coast Guard Headquarters, 2100 2nd St. SW., Stop... information on the availability of this material at NARA, call 202-741-6030, or go to: http://www.archives.gov... Testing Fiber Ropes 164.74 Cordage Institute, 350 Lincoln Street, Hingham, MA 02043 CIA-3, Standard Test...

  17. Phylogenetic analysis of the kenaf fiber microbial retting community by semiconductor sequencing of 16S rDNA amplicons

    USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database

    Kenaf, hemp, and jute have been used for cordage and fiber production since prehistory. To obtain the fibers, harvested plants are soaked in ponds where indigenous microflora digests pectins and other heteropolysaccharides, releasing fibers in a process called retting. Renewed interest in “green” ...

  18. 29 CFR 782.8 - Special classes of carriers.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2011 CFR

    2011-07-01

    ... subject to its jurisdiction. (New Pittsburgh Coal Co. v. Hocking Valley Ry. Co., 24 I.C.C. 244; Corona Coal Co. v. Secretary of War, 69 I.C.C. 389; Bunker Coal from Alabama to Gulf Ports, 227 I.C.C. 485.) The intrastate delivery of chandleries, including cordage, canvas, repair parts, wire rope, etc., to...

  19. 29 CFR 782.8 - Special classes of carriers.

    Code of Federal Regulations, 2010 CFR

    2010-07-01

    ... subject to its jurisdiction. (New Pittsburgh Coal Co. v. Hocking Valley Ry. Co., 24 I.C.C. 244; Corona Coal Co. v. Secretary of War, 69 I.C.C. 389; Bunker Coal from Alabama to Gulf Ports, 227 I.C.C. 485.) The intrastate delivery of chandleries, including cordage, canvas, repair parts, wire rope, etc., to...

  20. Dynamic mechanical analysis, surface chemistry and morphology of alkali and enzymatic retted kenaf fibers

    USDA-ARS?s Scientific Manuscript database

    Bast fibers grow in the bark layer of many plants, and have been used for textiles and cordage for over 6000 years. Bast fibers of kenaf (Hibiscus cannabinus L.) are retted by three methods and a comparative assessment of available reactive groups on the fiber surface and mechanical properties are ...

  1. 76 FR 28068 - Notice of Inventory Completion: Utah State University/College of Eastern Utah Prehistoric Museum...

    Federal Register 2010, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014

    2011-05-13

    ... pieces of leather (used to strap the wrapped infant to the stick cradle frame). In the 1960s, human... to 1971, human remains representing a minimum of six individuals were accidentally discovered during... maize cobs, 3 small pieces of cordage, 1 large twist/cache of dogbane fiber, 2 large pine cones, 1 bear...

  2. Southern pulpwood production, 1964

    Treesearch

    Joe F. Christopher

    1965-01-01

    In 1964, for the sixth consecutive year, pulpwood production in the South established a new record. Gains in 11 of the 12 States raised the total 8 percent above that of 1963. The cordage increases were largest in Alabama and Georgia. These two States also led in volume harvested; together they accounted for more than a third of the 1964 total. All but three of the...

  3. The Warpath of Nations: American Naval Logistics in the Northern Campaign of 1776

    DTIC Science & Technology

    2011-04-27

    logistical difficulties of the British. In contrast, most of the supplies of food sent from London for use by the British army that campaign season would be...obtained from local farmers and settlers. 10 In order to restore.and maintain the health of the army, it was absolutely critical that good food and...to, bellows for the forge, axes, cordage, nails, pitch, tar, oakum, powder, cannon, ordinance, barrels of pork , pump boxes, clothing, blankets, rum

  4. Impossible Neanderthals? Making string, throwing projectiles and catching small game during Marine Isotope Stage 4 (Abri du Maras, France)

    NASA Astrophysics Data System (ADS)

    Hardy, Bruce L.; Moncel, Marie-Hélène; Daujeard, Camille; Fernandes, Paul; Béarez, Philippe; Desclaux, Emmanuel; Chacon Navarro, Maria Gema; Puaud, Simon; Gallotti, Rosalia

    2013-12-01

    Neanderthal behavior is often described in one of two contradictory ways: 1) Neanderthals were behaviorally inflexible and specialized in large game hunting or 2) Neanderthals exhibited a wide range of behaviors and exploited a wide range of resources including plants and small, fast game. Using stone tool residue analysis with supporting information from zooarchaeology, we provide evidence that at the Abri du Maras, Ardèche, France, Neanderthals were behaviorally flexible at the beginning of MIS 4. Here, Neanderthals exploited a wide range of resources including large mammals, fish, ducks, raptors, rabbits, mushrooms, plants, and wood. Twisted fibers on stone tools provide evidence of making string or cordage. Using a variety of lines of evidence, we show the presence of stone projectile tips, possibly used in complex projectile technology. This evidence shows a level of behavioral variability that is often denied to Neanderthals. Furthermore, it sheds light on perishable materials and resources that are not often recovered which should be considered more fully in reconstructions of Neanderthal behavior.

  5. Prime Contract Awards Alphabetically by Contractor, by State or Country, and Place, FY 88. Part 10. (Hitachi Instruments, Inc.-International Cordage, Inc.)

    DTIC Science & Technology

    1988-01-01

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  6. Activity-induced dental modification in holocene siberian hunter-fisher-gatherers.

    PubMed

    Waters-Rist, Andrea; Bazaliiskii, Vladimir I; Weber, Andrzej; Goriunova, Olga I; Katzenberg, M Anne

    2010-10-01

    The use of teeth as tools provides clues to past subsistence patterns and cultural practices. Five Holocene period hunter-fisher-gatherer mortuary sites from the south-western region of Lake Baikal, Siberia, Russian Federation, are observed for activity-induced dental modification (AIDM) to further characterize their adaptive regimes. Grooves on the occlusal surfaces of teeth are observed in 25 out of 123 individuals (20.3%) and were most likely produced during the processing of fibers from plants and animals, for making items such as nets and cordage. Regional variation in the frequency of individuals with occlusal grooves is found in riverine versus lakeshore sites. This variation suggests that production of material culture items differed, perhaps in relation to different fishing practices. There is also variation in the distribution of grooves by sex: grooves are found predominately in females, except at the Late Neolithic-Bronze Age river site of Ust'-Ida I where grooves are found exclusively in males. Occlusal grooves were cast using polyvinylsiloxane and maxillary canine impressions were examined by scanning electron microscopy (SEM) to determine striation patterns. Variation in striae orientation suggests that a variety of activities, and/or different manufacturing techniques, were involved in groove production. Overall, the variability in occlusal groove frequency, sex and regional distribution, and microscopic striae patterns, points to the multiplicity of activities and ways in which people used their mouths and teeth in cultural activities. © 2010 Wiley-Liss, Inc.

  7. Native peoples’ relationship to the California chaparral

    USGS Publications Warehouse

    Anderson, M. Kat; Keeley, Jon E.; Underwood, Emma C.; Safford, Hugh D.; Molinari, Nicole A.; Keeley, Jon E.

    2018-01-01

    Ethnographic interviews and historical literature reviews provide evidence that for many tribes of California, chaparral plant communities were a rich source of food, medicines, and technologies and that they supplemented natural fires with deliberate burning of chaparral to maximize its ability to produce useful products. Many of the most important chaparral plant species used in the food and material culture have strong adaptations to fire. Particularly useful were many annual and perennial herbs, which proliferate after fire from seed and bulb banks, shrub resprouts that made superb cordage and basketry material, as well as animals that were more readily caught in postfire environments. The reasons for burning in chaparral are grouped into seven ecological categories, each relying on a known response to fire of the chaparral community. The authors posit that tribes employed intentional burning to maintain chaparral in different ages and size classes to meet diverse food and material needs, tracking the change in plant and animal abundance and diversity, and shifts in shrub architecture and habitat structure during the recovery of the chaparral community. Areas were burned in ways designed to create a mosaic of open grassland and recently burned, young and mature stands of chaparral with different combinations of species and densities. This management conferred on chaparral plant communities a degree of spatial, structural, successional, and biotic diversity that exceeded what would have been the case in the absence of human intervention. These impacts are still evident on contemporary landscapes.

  8. DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Taylor, C.S.

    Kenaf`s story is now being told in the fields of South Texas and Southern Louisiana as new fiber processing operation are responding to the public`s demand for more environmentally sound sources of fiber and farmer`s desperate pleas for additional production options. Despite the title, this paper focuses primarily on the {open_quotes}demand{close_quotes} pull from the market place that brings the new crop production/processing system together. Kenaf, an annual hibiscus crop, has been cultivated for several centuries in Asia and Africa, mostly as a substitute for jute fiber in the world`s cordage industry. The crop was first seriously considered in the Americasmore » when jute supplies from Asia were cut off by the War in the Pacific. In the 1960s the US Department of Agriculture selected kenaf as the most promising annual crop source of fiber for the pulp and paper industry. Industry took a look but it wasn`t their priority and the initial USDA effort ceased in the late 1970s. However, almost at the same time some newspaper publishers, who had been following the USDA work, intervened to keep things going. Kenaf International was formed in 1981 as system-oriented company determined to finally put things together on a commercial basis. The company focused on both ends (market and production), hoping to fill in the middle as it went forward. The primary objective at first was to introduce kenaf as an annually renewable fiber source for newsprint manufacturers. That eventually proved to be a very big bite for a small organization to chew, and Kenaf International (and its associates) soon {open_quotes}discovered{close_quotes} other aspects of kenaf`s potential as it pursued its goals. This is where we join The Kenaf Story {open_quotes}in progress.{close_quotes}« less

  9. Are osseous artefacts a window to perishable material culture? Implications of an unusually complex bone tool from the Late Pleistocene of East Timor.

    PubMed

    O'Connor, S; Robertson, G; Aplin, K P

    2014-02-01

    We report the discovery of an unusually complex and regionally unique bone artefact in a Late Pleistocene archaeological assemblage (c. 35 ka [thousands of years ago]) from the site of Matja Kuru 2 on the island of Timor, in Wallacea. The artefact is interpreted as the broken butt of a formerly hafted projectile point, and it preserves evidence of a complex hafting mechanism including insertion into a shaped or split shaft, a complex pattern of binding including lateral stabilization of the cordage within a bilateral series of notches, and the application of mastic at several stages in the hafting process. The artefact provides the earliest direct evidence for the use of this combination of hafting technologies in the wider region of Southeast Asia, Wallacea, Melanesia and Australasia, and is morphologically unparallelled in deposits of any age. By contrast, it bears a close morphological resemblance to certain bone artefacts from the Middle Stone Age of Africa and South Asia. Examination of ethnographic projectile technology from the region of Melanesia and Australasia shows that all of the technological elements observed in the Matja Kuru 2 artefact were in use historically in the region, including the unusual feature of bilateral notching to stabilize a hafted point. This artefact challenges the notion that complex bone-working and hafting technologies were a relatively late innovation in this part of the world. Moreover, its regional uniqueness encourages us to abandon the perception of bone artefacts as a discrete class of material culture, and to adopt a new interpretative framework in which they are treated as manifestations of a more general class of artefacts that more typically were produced on perishable raw materials including wood. Crown Copyright © 2014. Published by Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.

  10. DOE Office of Scientific and Technical Information (OSTI.GOV)

    Stone, E L; Migvar, L; Robison, W L

    Many years ago people living on atolls depended entirely on foods gathered from the sea and reefs and grown on land. Only a few plants, such as coconut (ni), Pandanus (bob), and arrowroot (mok-mok), could be grown on the lower rainfall atolls, although adequate groundwater conditions also allowed taro (iaraj, kotak, wot) to be cultivated. On higher rainfall atolls, breadfruit (ma) was a major food source, and banana (binana, kepran), lime (laim), and taros (iaraj, kotak, wot) could be grown. The early atoll populations were experts in growing plants that were vital to sustaining their nutrition requirements and to providingmore » materials for thatch, basketry, cordage, canoe construction, flowers, and medicine. They knew which varieties of food plants grew well or poorly on their atolls, how to propagate them, and where on their atoll they grew best. They knew the uses of most native plants and what the various woods were well suited for. Many varieties of Pandanus (bob) and breadfruit (ma) grew well with high rainfall, but only a few produced well on drier atolls. Such information had been passed down through the generations although some of it has been lost in the last century. Today there are new plants and new varieties of existing plants that can be grown on atolls. There are also new materials and information on how to grow both the old and new plants more effectively. However, there are also introduced weeds and pests to control. Today, there is also an acute need to grow more of the useful plants adapted to atolls. Increasing numbers of people living on an atoll without an equal increase in income or food production stretches the available food supplies. Much has been written about the poor conditions for plant growth on atolls. As compared with many places in the world where crops are grown, however, atolls can provide some highly favorable conditions. For instance, the driving force for plant growth is sunlight, and on atolls light is abundant throughout the year. Except on the driest of atolls, air temperature and humidity range only within limits set by the surrounding sea. There are no cold seasons, no frosts, no cold soils, no dry winds, and no periodic plagues of insects or diseases moving from miles away. Problems of soil drainage or salinity are few and easily recognized. Nor are there problems with acid soils, soil crusting, or erosion that challenge cultivators in many other areas. On the contrary, some of the black soils at the center of wide islands rank with the best soils of Russia and the American Midwest, except for their shortage of potassium and the uncertainties of rainfall. Some of these atoll soils contain more total nitrogen than many of the world's most productive agricultural soils and, in some, the total phosphorus content is so high as to be almost unbelievable--two to five tons of the element per acre. Certainly, problems exist in growing plants on atolls. There are also some special concerns not encountered in other environments, such as the wind and salt spray near shore. The two major physical limitations, however, are inadequate rainfall in some years and in many places, and soil fertility limitations. The alkaline or ''limy'' make-up of atoll soils means that a few plant nutrients, especially iron, limit growth of many introduced plants, and this is difficult to correct. As elsewhere in the world, many--but not all--atoll soils lack enough nitrogen and/or phosphorus for high yield, and all lack sufficient potassium. There is no practical way of overcoming drought except by use of tolerant plants such as coconut (ni) and Pandanus (bob), plus collection and careful use of whatever water is available. There are opportunities to overcome nutritional limitations mentioned above, first, by intensive use of all organic debris and household wastes in small gardens and, second, by use of commercial fertilizers. Imported fertilizers are expensive, certainly, but much less so on a family basis than the equivalent costs of imported food.« less

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