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" ... ounces of carbonic acid, would form a solution not sensibly different, in ordinary use, from the filtered water of the Thames, in the average state of that river. "
An Encyclopædia of Civil Engineering, Historical, Theoretical, and Practical - Page 552
by Edward Cresy - 1847 - 1039 pages
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the british and foreign medical review or quarterly journal of practical ...

john forbes m.d. f.r.s .f.g.s - 1841 - 606 pages
...that river. Chalk, which chemists call carbonate of lime, becomes what they call bicarbonate of lime when it is dissolved in water by carbonic acid. "Any...lime-water may be mixed with another, and any ¡solution of bicarboiu; of lime with another, without any change being produced: the clearness of the mixed solutions...
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Treatise on the Falsifications of Food, and the Chemical Means Employed to ...

John Mitchell - Food - 1848 - 500 pages
...ordinary use from the filtered water of the Thames in the average state of that river. "Any lime water may be mixed with another, and any solution of bicarbonate...solutions would be undisturbed. Not so, however, if lime water be mixed with a solution of bicarbonate of lime ; very soon a haziness appears, this deepens...
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Rudimentary Treatise on the Drainage of Districts and Lands

George Drysdale Dempsey - Drainage - 1849 - 156 pages
...state of that river. Chalk, which chemists call carbonate of lime, becomes bicarbonate of lime when dissolved in water by carbonic acid. Any lime-water...lime with another, without any change being produced. But, if lime-water be mixed with a solution of bicarbonate of lime, the mixture acquires the appearance...
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Paxton's Magazine of Botany, and Register of Flowering Plants, Volume 16

Sir Joseph Paxton - Botany - 1849 - 492 pages
...ordinary use, from the filtered water of the Thames, in the average state of that river." Again : — " Any lime-water may be mixed with another, and any...solution of bicarbonate of lime with another, without disturbing the clearness of either. Not so if the most pellucid limewater be mixed with a clear spring...
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JOURNAL OF AGRICULTURE

WILLIAM BLACKWOOD & SONS, EDINBURGH - 1851 - 716 pages
...liberates the chalk, which then fixes itself, with other impurities, (frequently iron,) upon the metal. Any lime-water may be mixed with another, and any...another, without any change being produced, the clearness remaining undisturbed. Not so, however, if time-woter be mixed with a solution of bi-carbonate of lime;...
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Chambers's papers for the people, Parts 13-18

Chambers W. and R., ltd - 1851 - 650 pages
...that river. Chalk, which chemists call carbonate of lime, becomes what they call bicarbonate of lime when it is dissolved in water by carbonic acid. '...limewater may be mixed with another, and any solution of bicar24 Ijonate of lime with another, without any change being produced. The clearness of the mixed...
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Minutes of Proceedings of the Institution of Civil Engineers, Volume 14

Civil engineering - 1855 - 612 pages
...that river. Chalk, which chemists call carbonate of lime, becomes what they call bi-carbonate of lime when it is dissolved in water by carbonic acid. "...another, and any solution of bi-carbonate of lime may be mixed with another, without any change being produced : the clearness of the mixed solutions...
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Sanitary Science: As Applied to the Healthy Construction of Houses in Town ...

Robert Scott Burn - Domestic engineering - 1872 - 314 pages
...carbonic acid. Any lime water may be mixed with another, and any solution of bi-carbonate of lime, without any change being produced. The clearness of...solutions would be undisturbed. Not so, however, if lime water be mixed with a solution of bicarbonate of lime. Very soon a haziness appears ; this deepens...
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Sanitary Science: As Applied to the Healthy Construction of Houses in Town ...

Robert Scott Burn - Domestic engineering - 1872 - 284 pages
...what they call bi- carbonate of lime when it is dissolved in water by carbonic acid. Any lime water may be mixed with another, and any solution of bi-carbonate of lime, without any change being produced. The clearness of the mixed solutions would be undisturbed. Not so,...
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The Sanitation of Cities and Towns and the Agricultural Utilization of ...

Charles William Chancellor - Public health - 1887 - 204 pages
...chemists call bi-carbonate of lime when it " is dissolved in water by carbonic acid. Any lime water may " be mixed with another, and any solution of bi-carbonate of " lime, without any change being produced. The clearness of " the mixed solutions would be undisturbed ; not...
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