- A
dyewood is any of a
number of
varieties of wood
which provide dyes for
textiles and
other purposes.
Among the more
important are:
Brazilwood or Brazil...
-
access to
foreign markets, so that they
could always obtain coffee, cotton,
dyewoods, fur, pepper, and sugar. He
acted to
create a
favorable balance of trade...
-
African slaves were put to work
alongside Indians and convicts,
cultivating dyewood and
maize and
harvesting solar salt
around Blue Pan.
Slave quarters, built...
-
sugar and tobacco.
Forest products included rubber,
carnauba wax and
dyewoods.
Exports included hides, skins, rubber, wax,
tobacco and cotton. Teresina...
- bees are raised. From the
tropical forests of the
inland regions come
dyewoods, hardwoods, and rubber.
About 20% of the state's
territory is forested...
-
Armenian cochineal Black walnut Bloodroot Brazilin Cochineal Cudbear Cutch Dyewoods Fustic Gamboge Dyer's
broom Henna Indigo Kermes Logwood Madder Polish cochineal...
- New World. The new
method used
logwood (Haematoxylum campechianum), a
dyewood native to
Mexico and
Central America.
Although logwood was
poorly received...
- (1830–1917) and
Johann Muller-Pack
acquired a site in Basel,
where they
built a
dyewood mill and a dye
extraction plant. Two
years later, they
began the production...
- over all of
Central America.
Their main
occupation was
cutting logwood, a
dyewood in high
demand in Europe. The
center of
their activity and the primary...
-
shipped valuable exports such as
agricultural goods,
tropical hardwoods and
dyewood, then a
widely used
textile dye in Europe. It also
handled gold and silver...