1052 lines
53 KiB
Plaintext
1052 lines
53 KiB
Plaintext
From: Institute for Hemp <instforhemp@delphi.com>
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Newsgroups: alt.hemp
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Subject: INSTITUTE: HEMP FOR PAPER REPORT**MUST READ** LONG
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Date: Wed, 16 Mar 94 20:46:28 -0500
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Message-ID: <p84OAy8.instforhemp@delphi.com>
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[somewhat reformatted -cak]
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This is a report prepared by The Institute for Hemp that re-examines
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USDA Bulletin #404.
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Thanks
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John
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*******************************************
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*******************************************
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An Institute for Hemp
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SPECIAL REPORT #B
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A Report on The Use of Cannabis Hemp as a Source of Raw Materials in the
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Production of Paper:
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American Grown Hemp Can Supply our Paper Needs.
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CONTENTS:
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Purpose or Intent of this report
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The History of Paper-making
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The Production of Hemp
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Composition of Hemp Hurds pg 6
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Summary Pg 7-8
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The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Purpose of Original Study pg 10
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Factors Justifying an Investigation pg 11
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Character of Material pg 12
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Operations Involved pg 13-15
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Description of Test pg 15-16
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Comparison of Test with Practice pg 17-20
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Physical Properties of the Paper pg 20-21
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Conclusions pg 21-22
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Conclusions from the Report
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References & Resources
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Purpose of this Report
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The intent or purpose of this report is to evaluate the current
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potential of using hemp as a source of raw materials for the production of
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paper.
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In the preparation of this report it was evident that sections on
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the history of paper making, and the production of hemp be included, and as
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such the three reports are presented together.
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John Birrenbach Founder The Institute for Hemp
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HISTORY OF PAPER MAKING
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Since it is not the intent of this report to give a detailed history
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of paper making, I provide this short synopsis, with notes as to the use of
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hemp, of the paper making processes history.
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Since the earliest time man has used things upon which to record his
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ideas. From drawing in caves to the use of tree bark and now paper, man has
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sought to record his ideas so that they may be preserved.
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The first, generally regarded, preparation of paper from plant
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fibers is about 500 BC 1.
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The use of hemp fibers is noted in 105 A.D. in an announcement by
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Ts'ai Lun to the Emperor of China. 2
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During the next 1,700 years many different materials were used to
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make paper. With the advancement of modern textile manufacture the use of
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scraps, mainly cloth and fiber textiles, for the production of paper became
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the norm.
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In the early 19th century the need for a sustainable source of raw
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materials to make paper was necessary. Until the 19th Century the paper
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used was in limited supply, the paper was only manufactured in areas were
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textile mills were present. 3
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In 1863 the first claim of making paper from wood is made by
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Augustus Stanwood and William Tower in Gardiner Maine. With the invention
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of the wood pulp process the decline and the eventual end of recycled rag
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paper was certain. 4
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By the mid 20th Century the use of tree paper had become the norm,
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and the use of other materials in paper production is labeled as specialty
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papers. It is also clear by the early 1900's that the use of trees for
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paper production is only a transitional material at best as tree production
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can not be sustained. 5
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In the early 1980's environmental groups bring pressure on the U. S.
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Government and companies producing paper from trees to stop the practice. At
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the same time the use of recycled paper, and the search for an alternative
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source of raw materials capable of supplying the U. S. with its paper needs
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continues. Conclusion:
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The use of trees in the production of paper is only a recent
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development. 6 The pressure from environmentalists and the public against
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the use of trees to make paper is not likely to be reduced, but rather
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increased.
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The use of recycled paper can not supply the United States with its
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paper requirements.
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The need to find an alternative crop that can safely produce paper is
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imperative.
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Production of Hemp
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As it is necessary to discuss the production of hemp as it relates
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to the production of hemp hurds, the raw material sought for the purpose of
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this report, I include a short synopsis on the production of hemp and its
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processing into the basic raw materials the plant produces. This synopsis
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is necessarily short as the purpose of this report is to discuss the use of
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hemp hurds as a paper-making material, not the cultivation and processing of
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hemp. For more information on the cultivation and processing of hemp it is
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suggested that you obtain copies of The Institute for Hemp Reports #A, C, &
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D for detailed information on The Laws, Cultivation Techniques, and
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Processing Techniques respectively.
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To understand the production of hemp it is necessary to understand
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the plant itself.
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The plant Cannabis Sativa L., is composed of a main stalk that can
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grow to a height of over 18 feet, a root structure that can reach a depth of
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over 2 feet. Extending from the main stalk are leaves and branches, on the
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branches grow leaves and flowers. The plant is naturally dioecious (7), but
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in some varieties there is a monecious or dual sexing is present. 8
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The stalk of the plant Cannabis L. is composed of a woody inner core
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surrounded by an outer bark composed of fiber. The outer bark contains the
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fiber commonly separated and used in the production of rope, cloth and other
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fiber products. The woody inner core contains a small percentage of short
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fibers. 9
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During the decortication, or fiber separation, process the inner
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core is broken into small pieces, these small pieces are called Hemp Hurds.
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These hurds correspond to shives in flax. 10
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Hemp is commonly grown in a variety of manners depending on the end
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use of the hemp. If hemp is grown for seed it is commonly grown in rows
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approx. 1-2 feet apart, similar to corn, this allows for branching and
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maximum seed production. If hemp is grown for fiber it is generally grown
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in rows as close together as 2-3 inches. 11 The hurds from hemp grown for
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any reason may be used as a raw material for the production of paper. 12
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Ideally hemp cultivated for paper would be grown in a manner
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consistent with that of fiber production. By cultivating hemp in this
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manner the largest volume of hemp hurds would be collected. Additionally by
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cultivating hemp in this manner the fiber would then be available for sale
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to textile manufactures.
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During the previous 5,000 years Hemp Hurds, with the exception of
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some relatively obscure uses, were basically a useless and uncollectible
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material that was commonly left in fields or burned for fuel. 13 In this
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report Hemp Hurds are considered to be of value for the production of paper.
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The Composition of Hemp Hurds The inner surface of the hurds usually bears a
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layer of pith, consisting of thin walled cells nearly spherical or
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angular, but not elongated. They are probably of little value for paper,
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but they constitute less than 1 per cent of the weight of the hurds. The
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principle weight and bulk consist of slender elongated woody cells. The
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outer surface is covered with fine secondary fibers composed of slender
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elongated cells, tougher than those of the wood but finer and shorter than
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those of the hemp fiber for commerce. 14
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RETTING Nearly all the hemp previously cultivated in the United States was
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dew retted. This would no longer be the case. In almost every
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instance of modern commercial hemp cultivation retting is now conducted in
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ponds. Hurds from water-retted hemp are cleaner and softer than those from
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dew retted hemp, (15) and are therefore, more highly sought by the textile
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industries. Additionally water-retted hemp hurds should also be of a more
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uniform nature and more highly sought by the paper maker. It can be assumed
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that a retting process designed for maximum paper production could be
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invented.
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YIELDS Yields of hemp production world wide range from a low of 5 tons to a
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high of 10 tons of hemp stalk per acre. Percentages of fiber vary
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from 12-30%. This leaves approx. 70-87% Hurds remaining as a source of raw
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materials in the production of paper. 16
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Yields of Hemp hurds are between 7,000 - 17,400 lbs per acre. 17 This
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becomes a sizable amount of materials that could be used in the production of
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paper.
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These yields have increased from less than 2.5 tons of hurds per
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acre when the original study was conducted by the U. S. Department of
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Agriculture. 18
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SUMMARY
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Many of the problems associated with the processing of hemp that
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were outlined in the U. S. Department of Agriculture Bulletin #404 have been
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overcome with the advance of technology. 19
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The major drawback to using hemp hurds as a source of raw materials
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was the collection process. During the period before the original report was
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prepared, there was little use of mechanical decorticators. 20 This made
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collection of the hemp hurds nearly impossible. This is no longer a problem
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since the invention of many specialized machines that can process tons of
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hemp per day. 21 These facilities could be located centrally for the ease of
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collection of the raw materials produced.
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Presently there is very little use for hemp hurds. With exception
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to the production of particle board or methanol fuels and farm bedding there
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is no use for hemp hurds other than paper production.
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Currently there is no supply of hemp hurds in the United States. To
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supply all the raw material necessary to provide paper, the United States
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would need to cultivate some 10-12 million acres of hemp. This would
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produce the necessary 54. million metric tons of raw material necessary to
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produce virgin paper each year. 22 Considering that the United States has
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some 1 Billion acres of Farm Land, this is approx. 1% of the available Farm
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Land to provide all the paper produced, in the United States, from trees on
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an annual basis. 23
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Shipment of hemp hurds could be facilitated by the construction of
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paper mills near the decortication mills. The Decortication mills in turn
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could be located close to the fields where hemp is cultivated. The proper
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installation of hemp cultivation in selected areas could facilitate the
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shipment of raw materials to the processing facilities.
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Cultivars of hemp with little, 0.01% Tetra-Hyrodocannibinol, or no
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psychoactive substances have been engineered. 24 This alone should be
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incentive enough to begin cultivation of hemp on a commercial scale.
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If the proper laws were introduced so that farmers, like those in
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France, Italy and Spain, could cultivate low potency varieties of hemp many
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farmers would take advantage of cultivating hemp. 25
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Currently the major Cannabis crop still grown in the United States
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is commonly called Sinsemilla Marijuana, or seedless marijuana. This
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material is highly prized on the illicit drug market because of its seedless
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nature and high potency. With the introduction of large scale commercial
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cannabis cultivation the pollen produced by these non-psychoactive plants
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would pollinate the illicit marijuana, thus producing seed and reducing its
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value on the illicit drug market. The seed, collected by the illicit
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grower, would produce a lower potency marijuana than that of the previous
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generation from which it was collected. This would in effect cause the
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eradication of outdoor grown marijuana in the United States at the same time
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adding a valuable farm crop and reducing the destruction of the forests.
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Clearly with the re-introduction of hemp as a farm crop all paper
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used by the United States in a given year could be grown by the American
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farmer. In addition by cultivating an additional 1-2% of the farm land we
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could establish ourselves as the provider of pulp for paper to a
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considerable size of the portion of the world. This would reduce the
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current trade deficit experienced by the United States.
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It is clear from the evidence available that the cultivation of hemp
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is a simple matter. In the traditional farm belt of the Midwest, hemp
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requires no fertilizers, herbicides, irrigation, pesticides or complicated
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cultivation or harvesting techniques. 26 As such hemp would be comparably
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cheaper to cultivate than corn, and require less physical care to reach a
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harvestable crop. It can be assumed that with the state of current
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technology that in comparison to other crops hemp would be an inexpensive
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crop to cultivate. 27
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It can also be assumed that given the current state of technology
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that it would be relatively inexpensive to process the crop into the three
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(Hurds, Fiber, & Seed) raw materials that can be produced from hemp. 28
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The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp Hurds
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Prior to the preparation of this report I discovered that several
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companies in Europe, and the United States, still manufacture paper from
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hemp. 29 I also discovered that several countries in the former Eastern bloc
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are actively considering hemp as a substitute raw material for paper
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production. 30
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Unfortunately there is little published scientific work on the
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subject. While it is quite clear that paper production from hemp is
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continued to this day little technical detail about its production can be
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uncovered. As such the only work I am able to cite from is The U. S.
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Department of Agriculture Bulletin #404.
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Since the only definitive published work is the U. S. Department of
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Agriculture bulletin, and since this work is extremely technical I have
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copied the important material, and added comments to them as needed.
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The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp Hurds by Jason L. Merrill, Paper-Plant
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chemist, Paper-Plant Investigations First Published Oct. 14, 1916 By the U.
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S. Department of Agriculture Bulletin #404
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Since Hemp Hurds are to be treated in this report as a raw material
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for the manufacture of book and printing papers, the qualities, supply,
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probable future, and cost of the material will be considered in comparison
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with wood, with which it must compete. There seems to be little doubt that
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the present wood supply can not withstand indefinitely the demands placed
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upon it, and with increased scarcity economy in the use of wood will become
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imperative. This effect is already apparent in many wood-using industries,
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and although the paper industry consumes only 3 per cent of the total forest
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cut, it is probable that it will be affected through this economy. Our
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forests are being cut three times as fast as they grow, and as wood becomes
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more expensive paper growing and reforesting will receive more attention.
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Thus, naturally, a balance will be established between production and
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consumption, but as this condition approaches its limiting values the price
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of wood may rise to such levels that there will be a demand for other raw
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materials.
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The use of waste paper in conjunction with chemical wood pulp has
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increased to enormous proportions, and it is probable that the increase will
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continue. Although it is a cheaper raw material than wood, it is reasonable
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to suppose that as the wood supply decreases and the price of wood pulp
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advances, the price of waste paper will advance somewhat proportionately. 31
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It is quite clear, from the considerable amount of research
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conducted, that the United States Department of Agriculture understood, in
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the early part of this century, that the availability of wood as a source
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for paper production would become limited or no longer desired. 32 As such
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they undertook studies, like this and others, because in their words 'a
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knowledge of other raw materials may be imperative." 33 Ed.
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In view of these conditions it is advisable to investigate the
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paper-making value of the more promising plant materials before a critical
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situation arises. To be of substantial value the investigations should
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include not only a determination of the quality of pulp and paper which the
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material is capable of producing, but should embrace a consideration of such
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relevant factors as agriculture conditions, farm practice, assembling
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conditions, transportation, and probable future supply.
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Certain cultivated plants seem particularly promising because in the
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harvesting of the regular crop that portion which might be utilized for paper
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manufacture necessarily is either wholly or partially assembled. To this
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class of plants belong corn, broom corn, sorghum, sugar cane, bagasse, flax,
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Hemp, and the cereal straws.34
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Factors Justifying an Investigation of Hemp Hurds Hemp Hurds form a crop
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waste, in that they necessarily are produced in the raising and
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preparation of Hemp fiber, and their present use and value are comparatively
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insignificant. 35
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The factors that justified the investigation of Hemp Hurds in 1916
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are no longer valid, as the production of Hemp was discontinued, on a large
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scale in the late 1940's, and entirely by the late 1960's, and Hemp Hurds
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are no longer a farm waste. 36 Hemp Hurds are no longer considered of little
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value. In fact the Hurd of the plant could be used to manufacture many
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products from Methanol fuels to Non-Wood Particle Board. When properly
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considered the Hurd from the plant may be the most valuable part of the
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plant. 37
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The factors that justify its re-investigation today are on a
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different scale of need and importance. The main factors justifying the
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re-investigation of alternative raw materials for the production of paper
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are: Primary is the need for a rural development plan that adds billions of
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unsubsidized dollars into the farm economy. Secondary is the need to halt
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the wholesale destruction of the remaining old growth forests, as is evident
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in the material available through other organizations. Tertiary to this is
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the need to reduce the pollution caused by the production methods currently
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employed in the manufacture of paper products. Ed.
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Without doubt, Hemp will continue to be one of the staple
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agricultural crops of the United States. The wholesale destruction of the
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supply by fire, as frequently happens in the case of wood, is precluded by
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the very nature of the Hemp raising industry. Since only one yearUs growth
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can be harvested annually the supply is not endangered by the pernicious
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practice of overcropping, which has contributed so much to the present high
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and increasing cost of pulp wood. The permanency of the supply of Hemp
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Hurds thus seems assured. 38
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It is quite clear that the people at the Department of Agriculture
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in the early 1900's felt that Hemp was going to continue to be a staple crop
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in the United States. Unfortunately the U. S. Department of Agriculture did
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not foresee the establishment of a total ban on the crop in 1937. 39 It is
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also clear, and stated many times in this bulletin, and elsewhere, that with
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the 'increased use of the machine brake' Hemp use as a raw material in
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general would be increased. 40 Ed
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Character of the Material
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No reliable data were secured as to the proportion of bast fiber in
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the total shipment of 4 tons, although two hand separations of small
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representative samples gave results averaging 8 per cent. ... Since the
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length of the ultimate Hemp wood fiber averages 0.7 mm., it is natural to
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assume that the bast fiber would tend to increase the strength of the paper
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produced from the Hurds. 41
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From the pulp-maker's standpoint the great irregularity in
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thickness, length, and mass of the woody pieces militates decidedly against
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economy in pulp production. The smaller pieces reduce by chemical treatment
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sooner than the larger fragments and are thereby overtreated, which results
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in a lower yield of cellulose fiber and a product composed of undertreated
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and overtreated fibers, the production and use of which are not satisfactory
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or economical. It probably would be found more satisfactory, therefore, to
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screen or sort the Hurds and treat the various sizes separately and
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differently. 42
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It should be noted that it appears that the Hemp Hurds used in this
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test were collected from hand broke dew retted Hemp. Hemp that has been
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pond retted and broke by machine will have a greater uniformity than that
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which was discussed in this report. 43 The material, produced by pond
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retting and machine braking, should be considered highly prized for paper
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cooking as it would have a great deal of uniformity of size and moisture
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content. Ed.
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Associated with the Hurds was a small quantity of chaff and dirt
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composed chiefly of sand, soil, particles of Hemp leaves and flowers and
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other extraneous matter. The sand and soil were present because of the
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practice of placing the stalks in the field, and the butts of the stalks
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being in contact with the soil. It is a simple matter, however, to remove
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the chaff and dirt by sieving, and this practice was followed in most of the
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paper tests conducted with this material. 44
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The technologies of the mechanical harvesters and braking machines
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have eliminated this problem 45 & 46. Hemp, after cutting, does not come in
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contact with the soil thus avoiding any contamination, which would result in
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the need for sieving. Further the employment of pond retting and
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centralized mechanical braking would assure that the Hemp Hurds would be
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clean of foreign material. Ed.
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Character of the Tests In the tests described in this bulletin, the
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Department of Agriculture employed a rotary digester of its own
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design, comprising a shell 5 feet 5 inches in length by 4 feet in diameter,
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capable of holding about 300 pounds of air-dry Hurds. It is believed that a
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test of this size is large enough to give satisfactory results and that the
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results are susceptible of commercial interpretation, while at the same time
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they are sufficiently small for complete control and afford fiber yield
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figures which are both accurate and reliable. Two such rotary charges gave
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enough fiber for one complete paper-making test. 47 Operations Involved In
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A Test
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A complete test on Hurds comprises seven distinct operations, and
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the method will be described, operation by operation, in order in which they
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were conducted.
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Sieving - The Hurds for the first test were not sieved to remove
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sand and dirt, but the resulting paper was so dirty that sieving was
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practiced in all subsequent tests. The Hurds were raked along a horizontal
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galvanized - iron screen, 15 feet long and 3 feet wide, with 11.5 meshes per
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linear inch, the screen being agitated by hand from below. Various amounts
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of dirt and chaff could be removed, depending on the degree of action, but
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it was found that if much more that 3 per cent of the material was removed
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it constituted chiefly of fine pieces of wood with practically no additional
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sand or dirt; in most of the tests, therefore, the material was screened so
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as to remove approximately 3 per cent. It became apparent that a finer
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screen would probably serve as well and effect a saving of small but good
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Hurds. 48
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The sieving of the Hurds would not be required as the currently
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employed methods in the handling and braking of Hemp stalks eliminate
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contamination, as such this operation is eliminated. Ed.
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Cooking - Cooking is the technical term for the operation by which
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fibrous materials are reduced to a residue of cellulose pulp by means of a
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chemical treatment. In these tests about 300 pounds of Hurds were charged
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into the rotary with the addition of a caustic-soda solution, such as is
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regularly employed in pulp mills and which tested an average of 109.5 grams
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caustic soda per liter, or 0.916 pound per gallon, and averaged 85 per cent
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causticity. 49
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In the manufacture of Hemp Hurd paper you do not use acids As such
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the pollution created with the production process could be reduced. Ed.
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Determination of Yield - For determining the yield of cellulose
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fiber the stock in the drain tank was washed with water until free from
|
|
waste soda solution, when, by means of a vacuum pump communicating with the
|
|
space between the bottom and the false perforated bottom, the waste was
|
|
sucked from the stock leaving the fiber with a very uniform moisture content
|
|
throughout its entire mass and in a condition suitable for removing,
|
|
sampling, and weighing for a yield determination. 50
|
|
Washing and Bleaching - Washing and Bleaching were performed for the
|
|
purpose of bleaching the brown-colored cooked stock to a white product,
|
|
since it was regarded as highly probable that the fiber would be suitable
|
|
for book-paper manufacturer. .. The bleaching powder used was estimated to
|
|
contain 35 per cent of available chlorine, as this is the commercial
|
|
practice, and the amount required was calculated to the bone-dry weight of
|
|
the unbleached stock. .. In these tests it was desirable so to cook the
|
|
Hurds that the consumption of bleach would be over about 10 per cent of the
|
|
fiber. 51
|
|
|
|
It should be noted that chlorine bleach is not the most desired
|
|
substance to use in bleaching Hemp, as it destroys the fiber, hydrogen
|
|
peroxide is the desired bleaching agent. Hydrogen peroxide is an
|
|
environmentally safe chemical. During the use of chlorine bleach many of
|
|
the dangerous pollutants like dioxin are produced, with the use of hydrogen
|
|
peroxide these materials are not produced, while at the same time providing
|
|
an adequate bleach for the paper. Ed.
|
|
|
|
Furnishing - Furnishing is the operation of charging the beating
|
|
engine with the desired kind or kinds of fiber in the proper proportion and
|
|
amount and the adding of such loading and sizing agents as may be
|
|
necessary. As shown in the record of results, the furnish in these tests
|
|
consisted of Hurd stock alone and a various proportions of Hurds, sulphite
|
|
fiber, and soda fiber.
|
|
Beating - Beating is that operation concerning which the paper
|
|
makers often say Tthere is where the paper is really made,U and although the
|
|
statement may not be literally true it contains a great deal of truth. It
|
|
is the operation whereby the fibers are separated from each other, reduced
|
|
to the proper lengths, and put in such a physical or chemical condition that
|
|
they felt properly and form into a satisfactory sheet. .. It is during
|
|
this operation that the loading and sizing agents are incorporated and the
|
|
whole furnish is tinted either to produce a satisfactory white or the
|
|
desired color. 52
|
|
The term Tpaper making,U as used in this publication, means the
|
|
operation of forming the finished sheet of paper from stock which has been
|
|
furnished and prepared in the beater. In these tests a 30 inch Fourdrinier
|
|
machine of regular construction was used, a machine which often is used for
|
|
the production of paper for filling regular commercial orders. The machine
|
|
is designed to cause the water suspension of fibers to flow on to a
|
|
traveling wire cloth, whereby the water drains away. More water is removed
|
|
by passing the wet sheet though a series of press rolls, after which the
|
|
sheet is dried on steam-heated drums and passed through polished iron rolls,
|
|
which impart a finish to the sheet. A Jordan refining machine was employed
|
|
in conjunction with the machine to improve further the quality of the fiber,
|
|
and a pulp screen was used in order to remove course and extraneous
|
|
materials from the fiber. 53
|
|
|
|
Description of Tests The nature of each complete paper test and the
|
|
dependence of each operation on the others were such that it does
|
|
not seem advisable to submit the results of the seven tests in tabular
|
|
form. The numerous cooks, however, which furnished the pulp for the paper
|
|
tests are presented in Table I in all essential detail. 54
|
|
|
|
Since the initial cooks and runs were contaminated and improperly
|
|
run the results are omitted from this report. Ed.
|
|
|
|
Run No. 141 was made from the stock of cooks Nos. 308 and 309 in
|
|
practically the same manner as run No 140. The stock ..., made into a
|
|
furnish of 14.7 per cent of sulphite and 85.3 per cent of Hurd stock, loaded
|
|
with 14.9 per cent of clay, sized with 1.26 per cent of resin size ... The
|
|
stock acted well on the machine and produced a sheet of better quality than
|
|
any preceding, with the exception of the color, which was due to using too
|
|
small a quantity of blue. 56
|
|
|
|
Run No. 144 was intended as a duplicate of run No. 143. Stock from
|
|
cooks 317 and 318 was given a medium brush and washing for one hour and a
|
|
further medium brush of one hour, bleached with 11.4 per cent of bleach, and
|
|
made into a furnish composed of 15.5 per cent of sulphite, 35.5 per cent of
|
|
soda poplar, and 61 per cent of Hurd stock, loaded with 21.4 per cent of
|
|
clay, sized with 1.17 per cent of resin size, hard brushed for one hour,
|
|
tinted by the expert colorer of the company, and pumped to the stock chest.
|
|
The stock acted very well on the machine, which was speeded to 75 feet per
|
|
minute, with the Jordan refiner set at a medium brush. The sheet is as
|
|
good, if not better, than that of run 143, and it is also a good
|
|
illustration of the extent to which proper tinting will enhance the general
|
|
appearance of a paper. The poor appearance of the samples of previous runs
|
|
is due largely to lack of proper tinting. Various degrees of whiteness,
|
|
however, are demanded by the trade. 57
|
|
|
|
After running several runs of paper the operators were able to work
|
|
out the bugs in the process and produced Run Nos. 141 - 144. Clearly had
|
|
they had the material and the funding, additional runs could have been made
|
|
that may have showed an improvement on technique. Despite the problems
|
|
encountered during the process the results of the finished product were very
|
|
favorable. Ed.
|
|
|
|
Comparison of the Tests and Commercial Practice
|
|
|
|
In work of this nature and on this scale it is practically
|
|
impossible to arrive at a cost of figure which would be susceptible of
|
|
commercial interpretation, and in the preliminary publication nothing will
|
|
be attempted beyond a comparison of the process used with the Hurds with
|
|
that process commercially applied to poplar wood. The process last used
|
|
with the Hurds should not be regarded as final, satisfactory or most
|
|
suitable, as it has been shown that progress was being made up to the
|
|
conclusion of the work.
|
|
|
|
In comparing the method of using Hurdss with the method of handling
|
|
poplar wood, a difference is apparent on the delivery of raw material at the
|
|
mill. Ordinarily, poplar is received at the mill in the form of logs about
|
|
4 feet in length, which may be stored in piles in the open. Hurds very
|
|
likely would be received baled, and it would seem advisable to store them
|
|
under cover for the following reasons: (a) Baled Hurdss would probably
|
|
absorb and retain more water during wet weather than logs of wood, thereby
|
|
causing excessive dilution of the caustic liquor; (b) prolonged excessive
|
|
dampness might create heating and deterioration unless the Hemp were
|
|
properly retted; (c) wet Hurdss could not be sieved free from sand and
|
|
chaff. Should further work show that the first two reasons need not be
|
|
taken into consideration, the third objection might be overcome by sieving
|
|
the Hurdss before baling. Even then, it is probable that baled Hurdss
|
|
stored in the open would accumulate and retain considerable dirt from
|
|
factory chimneys, locomotives, and wind. Checked pulp wood exposed in the
|
|
open invariably suffers from these causes. 58
|
|
|
|
The real comparison in the modern handling of Hurdss to wood should
|
|
be clarified. With the invention of pond retting, the machine brake and
|
|
centralized processing the paper mill would be only a small part of a larger
|
|
enterprise involved in the cultivation and processing of the Hemp crop. The
|
|
paper mill could in effect govern the processing of Hemp in the retting and
|
|
braking facilities to meet the demand of the paper mill. Thus the storage or
|
|
contamination problem would not affect the efficient production of paper.
|
|
Ed.
|
|
|
|
In the preparation of the raw material for the digesters there is
|
|
likewise considerable difference between Hurdss and poplar wood. The former
|
|
apparently requires only a moderate sieving to remove sand and chaff, which
|
|
operation doubtless would require only a small amount of labor and the
|
|
installation of simple machinery of low power consumption. In preparing
|
|
poplar for digestion, the 4 foot logs are chipped by a heavy, comparatively
|
|
expensive chipper of high power consumption, after which the chips are
|
|
sorted by sieving, the large pieces being rechipped. There would be a
|
|
noteworthy difference in the installation, operating, and depreciation costs
|
|
of the two equipments, and this difference would counterbalance to a
|
|
considerable extent the difference in cost of raw material storage. 59
|
|
|
|
It appears that in the initial processing of the raw material that
|
|
the processing of Hemp would be an easier matter than that of logs. Since I
|
|
have previously addressed the storage and contamination factor these are no
|
|
longer a contributing factor. The result is that Hemp processing for paper
|
|
over tree logs is a net gain, in favor of Hemp, at this point of the
|
|
processing. Ed.
|
|
|
|
The weight of Hurdss which are capable of being charged into a
|
|
rotary is a decidedly unfavorable factor. The weight of a cubic foot of
|
|
Hurdss varies somewhat with the proportion of bast fiber, but averages 5.4
|
|
pounds, which, compared with a cubic foot of poplar chips at 8.93 pounds,
|
|
represents a digester charge of 60.5 per cent of the weight of a poplar wood
|
|
charge, or, in terms of fiber capacity, the Hurdss charge would yield 38.6
|
|
per cent as much fiber as the wood charge. The Hurdss upon being baled for
|
|
transportation may be broken and crushed to such a degree that the weight of
|
|
the charge may be increased, and it might be found possible to increase the
|
|
charge weight by steaming or by the employment of tamping devices. This
|
|
small weight of charge constitutes one of the most serious objections to the
|
|
use of Hurdss in paper manufacture. 60
|
|
|
|
This is the only serious objection to the use of Hurdss for an
|
|
existing paper manufacturer. With the production of new paper mills and the
|
|
use of slightly larger rotaries this problem could be eliminated.
|
|
Regardless, this reduction in production is not a major consideration even
|
|
for the current paper manufacturer. Ed.
|
|
|
|
The yield of total fiber obtained from the Hurdss may be placed at
|
|
35 per cent of bone dry fiber calculated on the bone dry weight of Hurdss
|
|
used, or 33.1 per cent of air dry fiber calculated on air-dry Hurdss. The
|
|
yield of bleached fiber was not determined in this preliminary work, but may
|
|
be safely estimated as 30 per cent, which is low when compared with a yield
|
|
of about 47 per cent of bone-dry bleached fiber from bone-dry poplar wood.
|
|
It is believed quite possible that satisfactory cooking conditions may be
|
|
found which will give a higher yield than was obtained during these tests.
|
|
The stock should be classified as easy bleaching, and 11.4 per cent of
|
|
bleach is a satisfactory figure, although a little high. 61
|
|
|
|
While the yield of fiber is somewhat reduced, this appears to be a
|
|
problem that can be overcome. The classification of 'easy bleaching' is a
|
|
very positive consideration as the cost of bleach is a major consideration
|
|
in the use of a raw material for paper production. Again the use of hydrogen
|
|
peroxide, which can not be used in the production of tree paper, as a
|
|
bleaching agent is another significant factor in the reduction of pollution,
|
|
a hidden cost of production. Ed.
|
|
|
|
As to beating cost, in the last two and most satisfactory tests the
|
|
total washing and beating time was three hours, which may be about an hour
|
|
more than ordinarily is used in making papers of this grade, although the
|
|
practice varies to a considerable extent.
|
|
In regard to furnish, there is such a diversity of practice that it
|
|
is difficult to make a comparison, but if the Hurds stock can be produced as
|
|
cheaply as soda-poplar stock, the furnish used in these last two tests should
|
|
be regarded as satisfactory to the book and printing paper manufacturer.
|
|
The finish of the paper was not all that might be desired, but that
|
|
was almost entirely due to the calender stack available for the work, which
|
|
composed of nine light rolls, many of which were about 6 inches in diameter
|
|
and which had not been reground for some time. From a small test on a large
|
|
calender stack it was readily shown that the paper produced is capable of
|
|
taking a satisfactory finish.
|
|
This comparison, satisfactory in many respects, develops two factors
|
|
which are decidedly unfavorable to Hemp Hurds, namely, raw material storage
|
|
and digester capacity, and they must be taken into full account in
|
|
considering the paper-making value of this material, although it should be
|
|
recognized that investigation may result in the material improvement of
|
|
these conditions. Moreover, it is not at all improbable that further
|
|
investigation would develop more satisfactory treating conditions and more
|
|
suitable furnish compositions, and the belief in this possibility is
|
|
strengthened by the fact that material progress was being made at the
|
|
conclusion of this work. 62
|
|
|
|
The only serious factor reducing the economic viability is the
|
|
storage and processing problems that were overcome in the late 1930's (63)
|
|
and improved upon since. 64 Thus we could say that 'material progress was
|
|
made' after the conclusion of this work in 1916, in regards to storage and
|
|
processing. Ed.
|
|
|
|
Calculations on the raw material and acreage for a permanent supply
|
|
for a pulp mill producing 25 tons of fiber a day from 300 days per annum or
|
|
7,500 tons per annum, give the comparison between Hurdss and wood shown in
|
|
Table II. 65
|
|
|
|
The most important point derived from this calculation is in regard
|
|
to areas required for a sustained supply, which are in the ration of 4 to
|
|
1. Every tract of 10,000 acres which is devoted to Hemp raising year by
|
|
year is equivalent to a sustained pulp - producing capacity of 40,500 acres
|
|
of average pulp-wood lands. In other words, in order to secure additional
|
|
raw material for the production of 25 tons of fiber per day there exists the
|
|
possibility of utilizing the agricultural waste already produced on 10,000
|
|
acres of Hemp lands instead of securing holding, reforesting, and protecting
|
|
40,500 acres of pulp wood land. 66
|
|
|
|
This is the most significant results of these tests. Every 10,000
|
|
acres of Hemp, in 1916, could replace 40,500 acres of trees 'of average
|
|
pulp-wood lands.' It must be remembered that in 1916 the average yield was
|
|
below 2.5 tons of mature stalk. Currently world wide production is at a
|
|
minimum of 5 (metric) tons to a maximum of 10 tons of stalk per acre. 68
|
|
Given that all other factors remain constant that means that the mill, sited
|
|
as, needing 10,000 acres of Hemp or 40,500 acres of trees would now only
|
|
require 2,500 to 5,000 acres of Hemp or the same 40,500 acres of trees.
|
|
This changes the ratio of Hemp to trees from 1:4, in the original study to a
|
|
low of 1:8.1 or to a high ratio of 1:16.2. This is supposing that the
|
|
ability of sustained production of pulp can be maintained, which according
|
|
to current information can not be done. Hemp on the other hand is an annual
|
|
sustainable crop. 69 Ed.
|
|
|
|
Physical Properties of the Papers Produced
|
|
|
|
Samples of paper produced in the seven tests were submitted to the
|
|
Leather and Paper Laboratory of the Bureau of Chemistry. The report of that
|
|
bureau on its tests is given in Table III. 70
|
|
There is no system of numerically recording the general appearance
|
|
and Tlook throughU of a paper, but it can be stated that only papers Nos.
|
|
143 and 144 are satisfactory in these respects, the other sample being more
|
|
or less thickly specked with shives. The general character and tests of
|
|
these papers correspond very closely with No 1 machine finish printing
|
|
paper, according to the specifications of the United States Government
|
|
Printing Office, which call for a sheet not exceeding 0.0035 inch in
|
|
thickness, strength not less than 12 points, free from unbleached or ground
|
|
wood pulp, and ash not over 10 per cent. The strength factor of such papers
|
|
is about 0.28. The ash should not be over 10 per cent for this grade of
|
|
paper, but in spite of the larger amount used the physical tests are
|
|
sufficiently high. It is to be noted that the physical tests of samples
|
|
Nos. 138 to 142, inclusive, are higher than Nos. 143 and 144 in which 23 per
|
|
cent of soda poplar was used, which shows clearly that Hemp Hurd stock
|
|
imparts strength and folding endurance to a greater extent than does
|
|
soda-poplar stock, but will produce a somewhat harsher and stronger sheet and
|
|
one of higher folding endurance. Undoubtedly, there is more dirt in the
|
|
samples than would be tolerated by the trade, but this was expected since in
|
|
this preliminary work the raw material was sieved by hand screens instead of
|
|
by automatic machines which would sieve more thoroughly. 71
|
|
|
|
It appears from the tone of the report that even though the paper
|
|
produced may be somewhat out of standard that these standards may be
|
|
regarded as only a guide for perfection in paper. It is also clear that the
|
|
testers were impressed by the characteristics of the paper produced. Ed.
|
|
|
|
Conclusions
|
|
|
|
There appears to be little doubt that under the present system of
|
|
forest use and consumption the present supply can not withstand the demands
|
|
placed upon it. By the time improved methods of forestry have established
|
|
an equilibrium between production and consumption, the price of pulp wood
|
|
may be such that a knowledge of other raw materials may be imperative. 73
|
|
Semicommercial paper-making tests were conducted, therefore, on Hemp
|
|
Hurds, in cooperation with a paper manufacturer. After several trials,
|
|
under conditions of treatment and manufacture which are regarded as
|
|
favorable in comparison with those used with pulp wood, paper was produced
|
|
which received very favorable comment both from investigators and from the
|
|
trade and which according to official test would be classed as a No. 1
|
|
machine-finish printing paper. 74
|
|
|
|
The conclusions drawn by the author of the U. S. D. A. report are
|
|
significant in that paper of the highest quality was produced using Hemp
|
|
Hurds. Provided that improvements were made in the production and handling
|
|
of the crop the use of Hemp as a paper making material seemed to be a very
|
|
viable alternative.
|
|
The accuracy of the conclusions drawn in this report can be noted in
|
|
a 1917 report to the U. S. D. A. in which is quoted "Because of the scarcity
|
|
of raw materials for paper making and the increased tonnage of Hemp Hurds,
|
|
the matter was placed before a large paper company, with the result that the
|
|
entire year's output of a Hemp braking mill has been contracted for by a
|
|
commercial firm. The Hemp braking mill from which this supply of Hurdss
|
|
will be obtained is the largest of its kind in the United States and was
|
|
installed largely as a result of this investigation in 1916. It is
|
|
anticipated that further expansion in this direction will take place in the
|
|
next few years." 75 Ed.
|
|
|
|
CONCLUSIONS TO THE ENTIRE REPORT:
|
|
|
|
Since the dawn of time various materials have been used for the
|
|
production of paper materials. 76
|
|
Currently the main raw material used to produce paper is wood logs.
|
|
77 Current public knowledge and opinion is such that the use of wood for the
|
|
production of paper is hazardous to the environment. This opinion is not
|
|
likely to change in the near future. As such the need to search for an
|
|
alternative is imperative.
|
|
There are many farm crops that could be used to manufacture paper.
|
|
Plants like flax, cotton, kenaf, corn and others have a proven potential to
|
|
make paper.78 Unfortunately these other materials have major drawbacks.
|
|
Either the crop does not produce enough raw material, collection is
|
|
impossible, or use of the crop is environmentally unfriendly. Cannabis Hemp
|
|
on the other hand has none of these drawbacks, it is easily cultivated,
|
|
produces large volumes of suitable material, and is environmentally
|
|
friendly. 79
|
|
Currently Hemp is not an alternative to the use of wood logs, for
|
|
one simple reason; the cultivation of Hemp is restricted to such a degree
|
|
that even the cultivation of non-psychoactive cultivars is not economically
|
|
possible on the scale necessary to have an impact as a source of raw
|
|
materials for the production of paper. 80 With the removal of the laws that
|
|
restrict the cultivation of non-psychoactive cultivars of Hemp the United
|
|
States could eliminate the use of wood-logs in the production of paper.
|
|
The United States has the potential to produce enough Hemp to supply
|
|
our paper needs. By placing only 1-2 per cent of our 1 billion acres of
|
|
available farm land to Hemp cultivation we could eliminate the need to
|
|
process wood-logs into paper, and add a valuable export commodity to reduce
|
|
the U. S. trade deficit.
|
|
|
|
The introduction of Hemp to the farm economy would have many
|
|
beneficial elements.
|
|
|
|
PROFITS:
|
|
|
|
The most beneficial element would be the addition of the most
|
|
profitable farm crop cultivated in the United States in the last 100 years.
|
|
In reports to the Department of Agriculture farmers typically reported that
|
|
they had profits of 100-300 per cent over cost. 81 Most of the profit was
|
|
made in that the farmer of old processed the crop to fiber. Today the
|
|
farmers would be a caretaker for the crop and have little involvement in the
|
|
processing, as such the profit range may not be as high as once was. This
|
|
is not to say that Hemp will not be a profitable crop, actually Hemp will
|
|
probably be the most profitable crop available to the American farmer.
|
|
The cost of cultivation when compared to other crops would be
|
|
considerably less. Hemp is a plant that when planted requires little or no
|
|
care. 82 Fertilizers, Herbicides, Irrigation, and other methods of caring
|
|
for crops are not applicable to Hemp. As such the equipment, and chemicals,
|
|
necessary to cultivate the crop are limited in scope and cost. 83 Hemp in
|
|
effect should be one of the cheapest and easiest crops to produce.
|
|
|
|
RURAL DEVELOPMENT
|
|
|
|
Currently the United States is in need of a rural development plan.
|
|
The use of some new, or expansion of existing, agricultural crops will need
|
|
to be an integral part of this plan for it to succeed. 84
|
|
Hemp as a farm crop is a rural development opportunity. With the
|
|
expansion of an industry the size of the Hemp industry comes with it a shift
|
|
in the rural economy in a positive manner.
|
|
Billions of dollars will be added to those areas that cultivate Hemp
|
|
as a source of paper. It can be estimated that the farms that cultivate
|
|
Hemp will enjoy the addition of between 15-30 billion dollars annually.
|
|
This does not account for the additional income, generated in the rural
|
|
economy, from the construction of the facilities that process the crop, the
|
|
mills that make the paper or the support industries that spring up.
|
|
Hemp as the tool of a rural development plan will assist in the
|
|
revitalization of the rural farm economy without the need for government
|
|
subsidies or aid.
|
|
|
|
EMPLOYMENT
|
|
|
|
With the introduction of Hemp, a new farm commodity, will come the
|
|
opportunity for thousands if not millions of jobs in the rural economy.
|
|
These jobs will range from the medium wage seasonal work to high paid
|
|
industrial work. The entire spectrum of jobs will become available in the
|
|
rural economy.
|
|
|
|
REDUCTION IN GOVERNMENT AID
|
|
|
|
The use of Hemp in agriculture will add billions to a sector of
|
|
our economy that is in desperate need for assistance. With the addition of
|
|
Hemp to the farm economy those farm areas that cultivate Hemp will have a
|
|
reduced need for government subsidies or aid.
|
|
|
|
In conclusion.
|
|
|
|
It is apparent from the material presented that the need for the
|
|
re-introduction of commercial Hemp cultivation as a source of raw materials
|
|
for paper production is desirable.
|
|
|
|
It is also clear that the cultivation of cannabis for commercial
|
|
uses can be done so without the production of psychoactive substances.
|
|
|
|
Clearly the introduction of commercial Hemp cultivation would be a
|
|
valuable tool in a rural development plan, and assist in stopping the
|
|
decline of the American farm economy, with a highly probable reduction of
|
|
current government subsidies.
|
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FOOTNOTES: Foot Notes for Paper Report
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1 Paper-making The History & Technique of an Ancient Craft, D. Hunter 1943,
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pg. 465
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2 Paper-making The History & Technique of an Ancient Craft, D. Hunter 1943,
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pg. 466
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3 Paper-making The History & Technique of an Ancient Craft, D. Hunter 1943
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4 Paper-making The History & Technique of an Ancient Craft, D. Hunter 1943,
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pg. 565
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5 USDA Bulletin #404 Hemp Hurds as a paper-making material
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6 Paper-making The History & Technique of an Ancient Craft, D. Hunter 1943
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7 U.S.D.A. Motion Picture "Hemp for Victory", 1942
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8 Letters From Prof Goloborodko, Director, All Union Bast Crops Institute,
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Glukov Ukraine
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9 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Lyster Dewey, The Production and Handling of Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 2
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10 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Lyster Dewey, The Production and Handling of Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 1
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11 U.S.D.A. Motion Picture "Hemp for Victory", 1942
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12 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Lyster Dewey, The Production and Handling of Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 2
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13 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Lyster Dewey, The Production and Handling of Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 3-4
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14 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Lyster Dewey, The Production and Handling of Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 2
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15 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Lyster Dewey, The Production and Handling of Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 3
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16 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Lyster Dewey, The Production and Handling of Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 3
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17 Letters From Prof Goloborodko, Director, All Union Bast Crops Institute,
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Glukov Ukraine
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18 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Lyster Dewey, The Production and Handling of Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 3
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19 U.S. Patent Office Patent #2,127,157; #2,108,56; 2,197,683
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20 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Lyster Dewey, The Production and Handling of Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 3
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21 U.S. Patent Office Patent # 2,197,683
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22 U.S. Department of Natural Resources Information Office Information on
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Trees used in Paper Production for the year 1990
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23 U.S. Department of Agriculture Information Services, 1991
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24 Letters From Prof Goloborodko, Director, All Union Bast Crops Institute,
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Glukov Ukraine
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25 Letters From Midwest Farmers to The Institute for Hemp, 1989-1992
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26 U.S.D.A. Motion Picture "Hemp for Victory", 1942
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27 Letters From Prof Goloborodko, Director, All Union Bast Crops Institute,
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Glukov Ukraine
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28 Letters From Prof Goloborodko, Director, All Union Bast Crops Institute,
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Glukov Ukraine
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29 Phone Interview with Representatives of Kimberly Clark, 1991
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30 Letters From Prof Goloborodko, Director, All Union Bast Crops Institute,
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Glukov Ukraine
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31 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 7
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32 U.S.D.A. Bulletins # 72, 82, 159, 309, 322, Publications relating to
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materials for paper making
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33 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 25
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34 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 7-8
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35 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 8
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36 Phone Interview with Prof Bob Robinson, U of MN Hemp Experimenter,
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retired, 1991
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37 The Emperor Wears No Clothes, Jack Herer, 1992, Chapters 2, & 9
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38 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 9
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39 Marihuana Tax Act, 1937
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40 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 25
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41 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 11
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42 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 12
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43 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Lyster Dewey, The Production and Handling of Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 2
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44 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 12
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45 U.S. Patent Office Patent #2,127,157; #2,108,56; 2,197,683
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46 Letters From Prof Goloborodko, Director, All Union Bast Crops Institute,
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Glukov Ukraine
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47 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 13
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48 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 13
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49 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 14
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50 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 14
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51 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 15
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*52 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 15
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53 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 20-21
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58 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 21
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59 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 21
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60 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 22
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61 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 23
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62 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 23
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63 U.S. Patent Office Patent #2,127,157; #2,108,56; 2,197,683
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64 Letters From Prof Goloborodko, Director, All Union Bast Crops Institute,
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Glukov Ukraine
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65 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 23
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66 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 24
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67 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 24
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68 Letters From Prof Goloborodko, Director, All Union Bast Crops Institute,
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Glukov Ukraine
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69 U.S.D.A. Motion Picture "Hemp for Victory", 1942
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70 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 24
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71 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 24
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72 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 24
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73 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 25
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74 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Jason Merrill, The Manufacture of Paper from Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 25
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75 Report from the Bureau of Plant Industry to the U. S. Department of
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Agriculture, 1917 p. 155
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76 Paper-making The History & Technique of an Ancient Craft, D. Hunter 1943
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77 Paper-making The History & Technique of an Ancient Craft, D. Hunter 1943
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78 U.S.D.A. Bulletin #404, Lyster Dewey, The Production and Handling of Hemp
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Hurds, 1916, pg. 3
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79 U.S.D.A. Motion Picture "Hemp for Victory", 1942
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80 21USC802 Controlled Substances Act, 1972
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81 Letters from Farmers to the U.S. Patent Office Agriculture Office, 1800's
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82 U.S.D.A. Motion Picture "Hemp for Victory", 1942
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83 U.S.D.A. Motion Picture "Hemp for Victory", 1942
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84 FARM AID, Concerts 1989-92
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