What's the difference between cannery and tannery?

Cannery


Definition:

  • (n.) A place where the business of canning fruit, meat, etc., is carried on.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) Strain X4 was isolated several years ago from an anaerobic mesophilic plant treating vegetable cannery waste waters.
  • (2) Results indicated that the level or antinutritional factors present in untreated tomato cannery waste did not appreciably depress any measured production parameter.
  • (3) The vehicle in this outbreak was commercially preserved peanuts processed by an improperly equipped, unlicensed cannery.
  • (4) When they were built in the late 19th century, the brick-and-granite blocks were bustling with activity, as shoppers came and went from surrounding homes, sardine canneries, and the archipelago of Canadian islands just across the bay from what was then a town of more than 5,000.
  • (5) After clinical, epidemiological, microbiological, and toxicological investigations, an outbreak of botulism was confirmed 2 weeks later, Commercially canned peanuts made by an unlicensed cannery were identified as the vehicle of botulinum toxin transmission.
  • (6) The business, which has a century-long presence in the regional hub of Shepparton, is something of a throwback – not only does it sell Australian-only fruit, its suppliers come from a narrow arc of intensively farmed land adjoining its cannery.
  • (7) The capability of S9 from fish living near a fish cannery to convert 2-aminoanthracene and 2-aminofluorene was not observed.
  • (8) Genotoxicity of Aflatoxin b1 differed markedly upon activation with liver S9 fractions from fish with different pollution histories, with the highest activation potency in fish living near a fish cannery.
  • (9) The Cannery Workers Multiphasic Screening Program identified workers in need of physician evaluation, and referred each to a physician of his choice, for examination by appointment, while the worker was not acutely ill.
  • (10) In a cannery trials made to lower the nitrate levels (preheating, blanching, renewing water blanching) led to a loss of about 45% of nitrate (on a dry matter basis).
  • (11) We sit on toolboxes and sip Guinness in the sun, as he recalls how it all began for him, in Oklahoma, then working in the canneries of California's fruit-growing plains - Steinbeck for real.
  • (12) in the waste discharges of seven sewage treatment plants, four fruit and vegetable canneries, a meat packing plant, a poultry processing plant, and a potato processing plant located along the Cornwallis River in Nova Scotia, Canada.
  • (13) The Victorian government’s money is part of a $100m co-investment with Coca-Cola Amatil that it says will save the Shepparton cannery.
  • (14) Hence, it appeared that untreated tomato cannery wastes might be used as a feed ingredient in low-energy poultry diets (broiler breeder and laying hen recycling rations), ruminant diets, and as a protein source in regions of the world where such feed ingredients are scarce.
  • (15) Alkali treatment apparently affects the tomato cannery wastes almost instantaneously, as differences among actual treatment times and concentrations were small.
  • (16) By failing to support SPC Ardmona’s request for co-investment the government has effectively signed the death warrant on Australia’s last fresh fruit cannery, ensuring the destruction of thousands of jobs,” said the acting Labor leader, Tanya Plibersek.
  • (17) No salmonellae were detected in the effluents of the fruit and vegetable canneries.
  • (18) Today the canneries are gone, the border is far less permeable, and Eastport's population has fallen by three-quarters, lending a ghostly feel to the town, which stands on an island beset by fog and 20ft tides that make the surrounding ocean flow like a river.
  • (19) The lowest potential and the longest lag were exhibited by sediments in an apple cannery effluent area.
  • (20) We borrowed a lot of money to plant trees for the cannery and then we have the rug pulled from underneath us.

Tannery


Definition:

  • (n.) A place where the work of tanning is carried on.
  • (n.) The art or process of tanning.

Example Sentences:

  • (1) The development of spraying of sludges and composts will increase the quantity and efficiency of chromium in vegetals, because of various factors: the wastes of many industries: chromium plating plants, tanneries, painting and dyeing industries throw out hexavalent chromium; if the sewage sludges are purified by an irradiation treatment, it will tend to oxidize the whole chromium in hexavalent forms; at last, the presence of sewage sludges in the arable soil favours the assimilation of chromium by inhibiting that of iron (Figure 1).
  • (2) Industrial sources for offensive odours, such as meat, fish and other food processing plants, leather tanneries, sewage and domestic refuse processing plants, oil refineries, paper pulp, paint and plastic manufacturers, are outlined.
  • (3) The mortality of 2926 male workers at the tanneries in the "leather area" of Tuscany was examined from 1950 to 1983 comparing it with the national mortality.
  • (4) Four hundred and ninety-seven tannery workers and 80 employees not engaged in leather work, from 20 tanneries, were interviewed and underwent physical examination.
  • (5) A Cr(VI)-resistant yeast, designated strain DBVPG 6502, was isolated from a sewage treatment plant receiving wastes from tannery industries in Italy.
  • (6) A cluster of 7 lung cancer deaths among workers of a small tannery in Biella is reported.
  • (7) After completing 200 miles of road north from Khartoum to Adbara, and another 100 miles on towards Port Sudan, the government reneged on Bin Laden's £20m fee, instead giving him a majority share in a tannery, worth £5m.
  • (8) Even in view of critical questions about validity it seems likely that this excess might be related to exposure to chemicals in tannery work.
  • (9) Unfortunately that has meant that whereas we used to have tanneries more local to us, they’ve all gone offshore as well.
  • (10) The spores besides to cause infections of the workmen employed in the hide manufacture (industrial anthrax) through the effluents and solid refuses from the tanneries, are dispended upon the tiled ground and determine outbreak the haematic anthrax in the animals and agricultural coutaneus anthrax in the men.
  • (11) A significant excess of deaths was observed, however, due to accidental causes in one tannery and cirrhosis of the liver, suicide, and alcoholism in the other.
  • (12) The mortality of 833 male tannery workers known to have been employed in the industry in 1939 and who were followed up to the end of 1982 was studied.
  • (13) Regular meetings with tannery owners, the training of tannery workers in first aid, and support for the installation of safety and health councils in tanneries are the main programme activities.
  • (14) Serum and urinary Cr levels of a selected group of men exposed to CrIII in four Southern Ontario tanneries were compared with those of men not exposed to Cr.
  • (15) Tolerance level to trivalent chromium-Cr(salen)(H2O)2+ and hexavalent chromium-K2Cr2O7 was assessed in P. aeruginosa isolated from tannery effluent soil.
  • (16) Another interesting result is the excess of lung cancer among tannery workers.
  • (17) Hair samples were collected from 71 male tannery workers from four southern Ontario tanneries and from 53 male controls not exposed to Cr in the workplace.
  • (18) The findings of this study are consistent with those of the only other mortality investigation of leather tannery employees.
  • (19) Metal-, construction- and tannery workers were more frequently involved.
  • (20) Workers were studied at a tannery that operated from 1873 to 1960, once one of the biggest in Scandinavia.

Words possibly related to "cannery"

Words possibly related to "tannery"