Schlosser believes the damage wrought by fast food companies on America is even deeper than adding inches to the national waistline. |
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The ordinary grades of wrought zinc can be soldered easily by conventional methods. |
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Before a few stood braziers and camp fires from the night before, allowing for a few of the arrows to be wrought in flame. |
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The crude drawer handles made at Byrdcliffe of wrought iron, brass, and copper have retained their original dull surface. |
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The post and lintel were just frames for a set of double door gates wrought of thick lumber and braced with iron. |
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Although there are minor differences in the style of wrought curlicue, or the gauge of the steel, they are all much of a muchness. |
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To say that he discovers love and it changes him would simplify a situation, wrought with uncertainty. |
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Genuine wrought iron usually has a pitted and mottled appearance, even if it has been cleaned. |
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To recreate the ancient way of making wrought iron, two Swedish blacksmiths have smelted a bloom of iron and begin to shape it into a bar. |
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At the top of the stairs rested her throne, wrought of the finest ivory and decorated with gold and silver plate. |
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Cast or wrought monometallic aluminum bearings have high load-carrying ability, and can withstand very high speeds. |
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She would tell of the sadistic punishment wrought unto the unbelievers by the just who trusted in her righteousness. |
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They were made of wrought iron strips bound together with hoops and fired stone shot. |
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In this, the last of the great British railway bridges, mild steel superseded wrought iron. |
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The Bessemer process, patented in 1855, made mild steel a cheap and superior rival for wrought and cast iron in some products. |
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There were strikingly beautiful items made of wrought iron and bell metal, terracotta, silk and wood craft. |
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He opened the door for her and ushered her outside where a wrought iron table was set for a meal. |
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He pointed to his wonderful deeds, which fulfilled the messianic prophecies of the Old Testament and were wrought by the power of God. |
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The effect of titanium and vanadium on the strength of wrought alloys appears to be negligible. |
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The restaurant is beautiful, aglow with rich hardwoods, cream parchment, wrought copper screens and beaten metal surfaces. |
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The outside walls of the building now gleam white and the decorative wrought iron bars on the windows are a clean, pale blue. |
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The staircase still boasts its original wrought iron banisters and the original green tiles still adorn the walls. |
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Critics are seen as the bane of writers' lives, torturing their intuitively wrought texts by dissection with a sharp set of surgical knives. |
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The canopy was supported by four ornate wrought iron columns that were leftover from the bandstand in the park. |
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The company produces wrought iron gates, fencing, railings and balustrades. |
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I knew some major changes would be wrought in the film the first time I saw the trailer ballyhooing the arrival on local screens. |
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It can also be a wallowing in the past and all the wrongs it wrought, a desire to return and settle the score, to remake what we regret. |
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The wrought glass had been shaped to exact specifications, the strength of its form compensating for the weakness of its tensility. |
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These include the mansard roof, cornicing and wrought ironwork to the 1853 facade. |
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These alloys usually contain manganese as an impurity because wrought metal scrap is used in preparing them. |
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Some furniture, such as teak benches, cedar chairs and wrought iron table sets are designed so that they can be left in the elements year round. |
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The carefully wrought and fully detailed weather vane, set high above the machicolated parapets of the building, at once attracts attention. |
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One significant difference between the cast and wrought stainless steels is in the microstructure of cast austenitic stainless steels. |
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World War II wrought the second transformation, when defence industries began putting down roots. |
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The Spanish style is reflected in the use of balconies, wrought iron, plaster and brick facades, arched windows and doors, and high ceilings. |
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The style is very literary and carefully wrought, filled with archaisms and with echoes of Lamb's master Sterne. |
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These elegantly diminutive, finely wrought sculptures employ curved, flat and linear shapes that perch upon thin metal rods. |
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He almost suffered apoplexy when he saw the variations that had been wrought. |
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I will not applaud the clarity gained when the U.S. refuses to ante up more than a pittance for the damage wrought by tsunamis in Southeast Asia. |
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The question remains whether the carnage that was wrought from the air and by the relief columns was strictly necessary. |
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A Dachshund yapped behind a wrought iron gate in the courtyard I traversed. |
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The yield strengths of wrought magnesium alloys normally vary as a function of the direction of metal flow. |
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Around his neck hung a silver pendant wrought elegantly into the shape of a dragon. |
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She slipped her fingers in and drew out a finely wrought red-gold chain made up of many thin links joined together in a twisted rope. |
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Mae-Lynn crossed to the wrought torches to breathe softly on them and put them out. |
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However in the course of time, gold has become the preferred metal for use in hand wrought jewellery. |
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Until the industrial revolution, the most widespread use of iron was in its wrought form. |
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My wrought iron bed came with a white muslin mosquito net, which made me feel a lot like a princess. |
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The hero rubbed his fine, blessed necklace and frowned in thought, fingering the keenly wrought gold. |
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The lane was guarded by two enormous iron wrought gates, which currently lay open. |
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The family later moved to Wheldrake, where they bought The Forge and specialised in wrought ironwork. |
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The pure gold was wrought to form fragile golden leaves and dainty roses on a vine. |
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It is finely wrought and brilliantly realised, but devoid of charming idiosyncrasy. |
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A large allegorical needlework picture wrought by Agnes Park hangs above the mantel. |
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Miracles will be wrought, the sick will be healed and signs and wonders will follow the believers. |
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Among the skills indigenous to this region are the Dokhra craft, woodcraft, embroidered attire, and wrought iron craft. |
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The bank's own gold supply was kept in a huge wrought iron bullion chest, or kist. |
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The Albanians have wrought great improvements in their capital with a minimum of expenditure. |
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She could easily see all the changes the transformation wrought on her appearance, and she was glad for them. |
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Bent wood, rattan, wrought iron, or brass give you the best eye appeal in a floor-standing coat rack. |
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The most affecting scenes in the novel are those depicting the decimation wrought by this plague-like contagion. |
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Outside, there is a gravelled area to the front of the house enclosed by wrought iron railings. |
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Sam performs an autopsy on a car crash victim and finds the body is wrought with radiation sickness. |
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It is unpredictable, and it is the equivalent of splitting the atom on the molecular level, and we all know what harm nuclear technologies have wrought. |
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There will be exhibitors offering garden furniture, pots, wickerwork, gardening tools and implements old and new, wrought ironwork and various craft stalls. |
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Diana vaguely remembered seeing the widow's walk, hanging like an afterthought on the front of the house close to the top, wrapped with a wrought iron railing. |
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Then as now, the majority of Americans had little interest in examining the nuclear sword of Damocles their fear had wrought. |
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For Hugh, a 22-year-old IT worker, has wrought a minor miracle. |
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But I want to intersperse the two because, if I keep doing dramatic things, they'll have to put me in a cage because I get so emotionally wrought up. |
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By this time, I was bleeding at both knees, my head had become a swollen grenade of aching, pulsating annoyance, and my forearms were wrought with lactic distress. |
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Areas of the alps still show signs of environmental damage wrought by decades of cattle grazing, even though grazing stopped more than 60 years ago. |
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His care for well-defined blocks of color is almost lapidary, like the intricately wrought components of stained-glass windows or a jeweler's cloisonne. |
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The severe traffic jams that ensued wrought chaos in and around the Hudson River town of Fort Lee. |
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The destruction wrought by sudden, violent, and uncontrollable flooding, however, was recognized as a recurrent problem for riverine communities, landowners, and businesses. |
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And a coup probably would exacerbate the economic problems that months of friction, violence and impasse have wrought. |
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Many of the piers on the south side, namely, the eight westerly ones, including the half pier, retain the Norman ashlaring, upon which the new moldings have been wrought. |
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The building looked very much like a country courthouse, with an intricate wrought iron sign hanging over the door, a pair of scales framed by swirling designs. |
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She brings soul to anything her lazy-sounding voice touches and a vision of the world which is wrought in impressionistic, scattergun lyrics gilded with humour. |
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Small balcony projections with ornate balustrades and pretty wrought iron lamps flanking monumental doorways on the tall street walls characterized the early homes. |
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On each side of me from floor to ceiling were wrought iron metal bars. |
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The most expensive is wrought iron, where the metal is beaten into shape. |
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Prominent items include bell metal and wrought iron figurines, statues, lamps and other artifacts depicting the traditional gods, goddesses and animal figurines. |
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Early blades were pattern-welded, a technique in which strips of wrought iron and mild steel were twisted and forged together, with the addition of a hardened edge. |
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Originally fashioned from wrought iron designed and forged by blacksmiths, today's ornamental fencing is crafted using modern materials and current production techniques. |
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So I was more wrought with nerves about that than almost anything in that number. |
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However, in recent years he has turned his skill and artistry to the crafting of artefacts wrought from ancient native woods, bone, gold, bronze and steel. |
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Eight-year-old Luke Vardy narrowly escaped with his life after he slipped and lost his footing as he climbed wrought iron fencing in the front garden of his Rotherham home. |
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He led a nation secure in its past, with a strong oral tradition of myths and legends, but one somewhat behind the social change wrought in the rest of north Europe. |
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While a fragmented helmet had been unusually wrought from one piece of iron, the shield boss and sword pommel can only be paralleled by Swedish finds. |
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The thought that such horror could be wrought by a white boy who wasn't hugged enough, doesn't seem to occur to them. |
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His home is ultra-accessible, protected from the public by only a wrought iron fence, thick hedge, and surveillance camera. |
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Since the late '70s, and the fashion upheaval wrought by punk rock, people have been spearing the little metal pins through their ears or leather jackets. |
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Within its formal structure, her poetry is ingenious, witty, exquisitely wrought, and psychologically penetrating. |
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The roof spans have wrought iron trusses with cast iron struts on girders between the columns. |
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Between 1997 and 1999 the roof was refurbished and 10,000 panes of toughened glass 'float' above the wrought iron trusses. |
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The genius of the Italians wrought by solid toil what the myth-making imagination of the Germans had projected in a poem. |
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The cow is a large, raw, high-boned, unfattenable animal, and being regularly wrought in the cultivation of the soil the milk is bad. |
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Then I went down to the potter's house, and, behold, he wrought a work on the wheels. |
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In 1925, James Aston of the United States developed a process for manufacturing wrought iron quickly and economically. |
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But Verlaine's quadrisyllabic lines, which know when to run on and when to be end-stopped, triumph with their carefully wrought musicality. |
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The process could be repeated several times to produce wrought iron of desired quality. |
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The puddling furnace was initially a means of producing wrought iron, but was later applied to steel production. |
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The tiebacks could be made of wrought iron or dried flowers glued to cloth. |
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World War II wrought widespread destruction of most of the city due to the persistent Allied air raids on Japan and the use of incendiary bombs. |
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I often wonder what goes on outside the wrought iron gates of the Master's compound, beyond the shabby facade of the slave's chattel house. |
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His cold sesame chicken seasoned with chili is finely shredded and served in carefully wrought clusters around a salad of mizuna. |
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The bridge was widened by adding wrought iron plate girders and transverse girders, supporting longitudinal joists with iron arch plates. |
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Forged, wrought, drawn, rolled or pressed metals calorize better than cast metals. |
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Another key aspect of French success was the changes wrought in the officer classes. |
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In the second stage, pig iron is converted to wrought iron, steel, or cast iron. |
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Pillared wrought iron electric gates open to a sweeping drive with turning circle and double garage. |
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The new organization should first address the wrongs wrought by Western colonialists, according to Rael. |
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All sudden renovation of the body is wrought either by the spirit, or by malacissations. |
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What changes will be wrought in the character and condition of mankind, as the millennium advances and rolls blissfully away. |
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The potions of School Divinity wrought easily with him, so that he was not lost a whit in their Intricoes any further than they lose themselves. |
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The wrought iron doorjamb is still twisted, the result of explosives the Army used to blast their way into the house, the family adds. |
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Some wrought iron is still being produced for heritage restoration purposes, but only by recycling scrap. |
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The slag inclusions, or stringers, in wrought iron give it properties not found in other forms of ferrous metal. |
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Other studies show that sulfur impurities in the wrought iron decrease corrosion resistance, but phosphorus increase corrosion resistance. |
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Environments with a high concentration of chlorine ions also decreases wrought iron's corrosion resistance. |
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In Table 1, the chemical composition of wrought iron is compared to that of pig iron and carbon steel. |
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Although it appears that wrought iron and plain carbon steel have similar chemical compositions, that is deceiving. |
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Amongst its other properties, wrought iron becomes soft at red heat, and can be easily forged and forge welded. |
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For most purposes, ductility is a more important measure of the quality of wrought iron than tensile strength. |
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It was found that the stringers common to other wrought irons were not present thus making it very malleable for the smith to work hot and cold. |
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The vast majority of wrought iron available today is from reclaimed materials. |
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This could be converted into wrought iron using the Aston process for a fraction of the cost and time. |
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The biggest advantage of this setup is that it produces twice as much wrought iron. |
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Initially the heating vessel was made of wrought iron plates, but these oxidized, and he substituted a cast iron vessel. |
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This produced the first steel of modern quality, providing a means of efficiently changing excess wrought iron into useful steel. |
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The first, and the most common, traditional method is solid state carburization of wrought iron. |
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In this process, wrought iron and cast iron may be heated together in a crucible to produce steel by fusion. |
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Their method was something similar to the method of carburization of wrought iron. |
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Many industries were constrained by the lack of steel, being reliant on cast iron and wrought iron alone. |
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At foundries it was common to blend scrap wrought iron with cast iron to improve the physical properties of castings. |
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Cast and especially pig iron have excess slag which must be at least partially removed to produce quality wrought iron. |
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However both processes are now obsolete, and wrought iron is now hardly made. |
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The bars of wrought iron were of poor quality, called muck bars or puddle bars. |
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Pig iron and cast iron have higher carbon content than wrought iron, but have a lower melting point than iron or steel. |
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The puddling furnace is a metalmaking technology used to create wrought iron or steel from the pig iron produced in a blast furnace. |
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This deft, delicately wrought story is Murakami at his best. |
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In the 17th, 18th, and 19th centuries, wrought iron went by a wide variety of terms according to its form, origin, or quality. |
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Cast iron, unlike wrought iron, is brittle and cannot be worked either hot or cold. |
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Careful control of the alloying and tempering eventually allowed for wrought iron with properties comparable to modern steel. |
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Many products described as wrought iron, such as guard rails, garden furniture and gates, are actually made of mild steel. |
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The demand for wrought iron reached its peak in the 1860s, being in high demand for ironclad warships and railway use. |
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A wrought product is one that has been mechanically worked by forging, extruding, rolling, hammering, etc. |
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The bridge had been badly designed, being trussed with wrought iron straps, which were wrongly thought to reinforce the structure. |
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The reasons why the iron produced by Darby was not used in forges to make wrought iron have been much debated. |
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In some mills timber was also eliminated from the roof structure which was supported by cast or wrought iron trusses. |
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The increase in mechanization required more metal parts, which were usually made of cast iron or wrought iron. |
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Mild steel corrodes more readily than wrought iron, but is cheaper and more widely available. |
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An impressive marble staircase with scrolled wrought iron balustrading, leads up to the first floor gallery landing. |
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This made steel much more economical, thereby leading to wrought iron no longer being produced in large quantities. |
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Surely of this work, and of this time, it shall be said, what hath God wrought! |
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Rolling replaced hammering for consolidating wrought iron and expelling some of the dross. |
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Toward the end of the 18th century, cast iron began to replace wrought iron for certain purposes, because it was cheaper. |
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And CNN exploited the pixilated images emanating from videophones for all the drama they wrought. |
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It was also used in various other industries, including the manufacture of wrought iron ironware such as pins, pots, and pans for ironmongers. |
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Even the people of Bikini like Americans, despite the ecocide nuclear testing wrought on their atoll. |
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They can be blocked, devoid of loo roll, flooded, and generally over wrought with over use. |
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The city center contains many examples of colonial and religious architecture, often incorporating distinctive wrought ironwork. |
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Your heart sang with his gleecraft, words wondrously wrought, kennings keen with knowing. |
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He then headed south to Shiraz, a large, flourishing city spared the destruction wrought by Mongol invaders on many more northerly towns. |
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They developed a polychrome style of gold work, using wrought cells or setting to encrust gemstones into their gold objects. |
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Now he that hath wrought us for the selfsame thing is God, who also hath given unto us the earnest of the Spirit. |
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Meanwhile, at Thetis' request, Hephaestus fashions a new set of armor for Achilles, including a magnificently wrought shield. |
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Pliny gives a special place to iron, distinguishing the hardness of steel from what is now called wrought iron, a softer grade. |
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Like most things that Hsieh hath wrought, this too is by design. |
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God never wrought miracle to convince atheism, because his ordinary works convince it. |
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These wagons on these tramlines would be pulled by horse over wooden rails, which later were replaced by wrought iron. |
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Traditionally, pig iron was worked into wrought iron in finery forges, later puddling furnaces, and more recently into steel. |
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Smelting and producing wrought iron was known in ancient Europe and the Middle East, but iron was produced in bloomeries by direct reduction. |
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For sculpture, the principal materials employed were glass and wrought iron, resulting in sculptural qualities even in architecture. |
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Of course, that doesn't really alter the havoc they've wrought. |
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A number of processes for making wrought iron without charcoal were devised as the Industrial Revolution began during the latter half of the 18th century. |
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But that fact appeared to limit some of the damage that could have been wrought had the second bomber been able to detonate his explosives amid the crowd. |
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The improvement of steelmaking processes improved the overall quality of steel by repeated forging, folding, and stacking of wrought iron from pig iron to make swords. |
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One was to hammer out wrought iron into plates and cut or slit the plates. |
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And nobody sells a fight better than Money Mayweather, the flamboyant and profane braggart and most lucratively wrought villain in the history of sport. |
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Before it can be used, and before it can be worked by a blacksmith, it must be converted to a more malleable form as bar iron, the early stage of wrought iron. |
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The weaker wrought iron was found to be sufficiently strong for many uses. |
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His method let him produce steel in large quantities cheaply, thus mild steel came to be used for most purposes for which wrought iron was formerly used. |
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While the bloomery process produced wrought iron directly from ore, cast iron or pig iron were the starting materials used in the finery forge and puddling furnace. |
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From the rusticated base to the ornate window surrounds, cornices, wrought iron balconies and mansard roof, the detailing is meticulously observed. |
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As cast iron was not yet technologically feasible for the Europeans, the only possibility was to use wrought iron bars hammered together and held with hoops like barrels. |
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These Africans wrought a demographic revolution, replacing or joining with either the indigenous Caribs or the European settlers who were there as indentured servants. |
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Steel also supplanted wrought iron when it became readily available in the latter half of the 19th century, providing great savings when compared with iron in cost and weight. |
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Thi will on erd be wrought, eek as it is wrought in heven ay. |
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And there were vessels that are wrought by magic of Mahound out of seasand and the air by a warlock with his breath that he blares into them like to bubbles. |
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This is a diffusion process in which wrought iron is packed in crucibles or a hearth with charcoal, then heated to promote diffusion of carbon into the iron to produce steel. |
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Before the development of effective methods of steelmaking and the availability of large quantities of steel, wrought iron was the most common form of malleable iron. |
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The relationship between wrought iron and cast iron, for structural purposes, may be thought of as analogous to the relationship between wood and stone. |
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The first rail rolling mill was established by John Birkenshaw in 1820, where he produced fish bellied wrought iron rails in lengths of 15 to 18 feet. |
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Although steel was more desirable, cast iron was cheaper and thus was more commonly used for implements in ancient China, while wrought iron or steel was used for weapons. |
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A commercial source of pure iron is available and is used by smiths as an alternative to traditional wrought iron and other new generation ferrous metals. |
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An imposing traditional detached house with double wrought iron gates opening to the front garden and attractive brick paviours which provide parking for several vehicles. |
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Wonders, in the way of cure of bodily disease, are said to have been wrought by this saint, whose fame is now passed away and name almost forgotten. |
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The materials used were cast and wrought iron, brass and gun metal. |
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Gerard, in the stand for a second day, was overcome as he told how he still bore scars on his back, skull and arms from a beating with a wrought iron carpet beater. |
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So great was the conflux of torches, the flash and gleam of weapons, and the babel of sounds that it wrought on the mind the impression of a fire blazing up in the night. |
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The political reforms wrought in Aachen were to have an immense impact on the political definition of Western Europe for the rest of the Middle Ages. |
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Due to the variations in iron ore origin and iron manufacture, wrought iron can be inferior or superior in corrosion resistance compared to other iron alloys. |
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Carbon content in iron was not implicated as the reason for the differences in properties of wrought iron, cast iron, and steel until the 18th century. |
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This is mainly because of the limited availability of true wrought iron. |
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The engineers at AMC have wrought a minor miracle in modifying this archaic transmission so that it is merely inconvenient instead of being an outright disappointment. |
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Most 19th century applications of wrought iron, including the Eiffel Tower, bridges, and the original framework of the Statue of Liberty, used puddled iron. |
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But when I had come to that part of the city which I judged to have contained the relics I sought I found havoc that had been wrought there even greater than elsewhere. |
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