10 LIBROS DEL INGLÉS RELACIONADOS CON «TREHALA»
Descubre el uso de
trehala en la siguiente selección bibliográfica. Libros relacionados con
trehala y pequeños extractos de los mismos para contextualizar su uso en la literatura.
1
The Chemist: A Monthly Journal of Chemical and Physical ...
I took some grains of starch from the trehala, and boiled them in a large quantity
of distilled water for half an hour. They were but little altered in their form, and
always became of a blackish blue with iodine. After two hours' more boiling,
almost ...
SOME ACCOUNT OF THE TREHALA, A NEW INSECT PRODUCT. BY H.
MOQUIN-TANDON. The trehala, or tricula, is a singular case which is well known
in Constantinople and in some parts of the East. At the last Great Exhibition,
some of ...
3
The Technologist. Ed. by P.L. Simmonds
SOME ACCOUNT OF THE TREHALA, A NEW INSECT PRODUCT. BT H.
MOQUIN-TANDON. The trehala, or tricula, is a singular case which is well known
in Constantinople and in some parts of the East. At the last Great Exhibition,
some of ...
Peter Lund Simmonds,
1862
4
Elements of medical zoology
It was at first supposed that the trehala was obtained from an onopordon. It was
afterwards ascertained that it grows on the branches of a Syrian echinops. (
Decaisne.) It is produced by an insect, and is found principally in the desert
between ...
Alfred Moquin-Tandon,
1861
5
Advances in Insect physiology APL
... that the major carbohydrate component of insect blood is the non-reducing
disaccharide trehalose (I), a compound previously mainly associated with fungi,
although it had indeed first been isolated by Berthelot in 1859 from Trehala
manna, ...
J. W. L. Beament, J. E. Treherne, Sir Vincent Brian Wigglesworth,
2011
6
Chemistry of The Carbohydrates
It is found in young mushrooms, but as the plants develop the trehalose content is
replaced by mannitol, and in aged or dried mushrooms the sugar is completely
replaced by mannitol.96 Trehala manna, a source of trehalose, is not a true ...
Unknown AEHLERT, William Ward Pigman,
1948
7
Chambers's Twentieth Century Dictionary (part 4 of 4: S-Z ...
Trehala, trēhä′la, n. a kind of manna excreted by the insect Larinus maculatus,
in the form of cocoons—also Turkish manna.—n.Trē′halōse, a sugar extracted
from trehala. Treillage, trel′āj, n. a frame to train shrubs and fruittrees upon.
8
Alternative Sweeteners, Fourth Edition
The insect cocoon or shell was known as “trehala manna” (Leibowitz 1943).
Other insects make similar structures using different sugars (Leibowitz 1943,
1944). Trehala manna was described as a sticky raw material, and Leibowitz
reported ...
9
Elsevier's Dictionary of Chemoetymology: The Whys and ...
... travertine a rock species, ultimately derived from lapis tiburtinus (Latin: stone
from Tibur, Latium) trehalase derived from trehalose and -ase trehalose
C12H22O11, derived from trehala (edible pupal covering of the beetle Larinus
maculatus), ...
A pharmaceutical substance, known as Trehala, has lately been studied by M.
Guibourt. It is a kind of insect-nest or hollow cocoon, round or oval, about the size
of a large olive, and is the produce of a coleopterous insect (or beetle) closely ...
A.B. Herbert, A.P. Beresford, Alexander Dedekind,
1742
NOTICIAS EN LAS QUE SE INCLUYE EL TÉRMINO «TREHALA»
Conoce de qué se habla en los medios de comunicación nacionales e internacionales y cómo se emplea el término
trehala en el contexto de las siguientes noticias.
Ancient Manna on Modern Menus
Rarer are the mannas not from sap, including Trehala manna, the sweet-tasting cocoon of the Larinus maculates beetle from Turkey; and manna-lichen ... «New York Times, Jun 10»