What's the difference between humation and inhumation?
Humation
Definition:
(n.) Interment; inhumation.
Example Sentences:
(1) The main product of the humate-induced PMN response is H2O2.
(2) Results tend to confirm that the presence of humate-type substances seems to have no significant influence on the development of poliomyelitis virus type 1.
(3) After having analyzed several surveys on natural inactivation of viruses in water, the authors have attempted to determine the survival life of poliomyelitis virus type 1 in hydrous medium, of known composition, well-buffered and devoid of any bacterial contamination on the one hand, and on the other hand, in a similar medium with addition of organic humate-type substances.
(4) The qualitative and quantitative composition of microorganisms occurring in the rhizosphere of lettuce plants grown in a Svet hot-house on the Balcanin substrate using humates, canned and silvered water was investigated.
(5) Natrium humate introduced into broiler chickens Broiler-6 line increases mass on 5-7% on the average and poultry safety on 3-5%.
(6) A therapeutic effect of natrium humate given to experimental mongrel rats exposed to 60Co-gamma-radiation of lethal doses has been studied.
(7) 1) are most sensitive against ammonium humate than monolayers.
(8) The adsorption of the virus to the cell surface has been found to be the most humate-sensitive phase of the herpesvirus multiplication cycle (Fig.
(9) Humic acids in the form of potassium humate (KH), at concentrations exerting a strong inhibitory effect on the formation of N-methyl-N-nitrosourea (MNU) when present during the nitrosation of N-methylurea (MU) at pH 3, did not reduce the mutagenicity of preformed MNU in Tradescantia, clone 4430.
(10) Natrium humate introduction into ration of broilers activates the synthetic phase of protein exchange.
(11) Ten synthetic polymers of diphenolic compounds (KOP, HYKOP, CHOP, 3,4-DHTOP Na-ADROP, NH4-ADROP, Na-NORADROP, NH4-NORADROP, GENOP, and 2,5-DHTOP) as well as two phenolic polymers of natural origin (Na-humate, NH4-humate) were tested for their effectiveness on several strains of influenza virus type A and B.
(12) Three cell lines were chosen for examining the cytotoxicity of ammonium humate: rabbit kidney primary cells, HEp-2- and FL-cells.
(13) It can be concluded that humates and canned water help maintain microbiological activity of the plant rhizosphere which allows a longer-term use of the Balcanin substrate for plant cultivation in the Svet hot-house.
(14) Ammonium humate, isolated from peat water, is a higher molecular polyphenolic compound with a strong antiviral activity against herpes simplex virus type 1 and type 2.
(15) Three specimens of low-molecular humic substances were tested (two naturally occurring humates and one synthetically prepared humate).
(16) Using the pharmaco-biological tests and modelling of the diseases a high antitoxic effect of sodium humate and possibility to use it in medicine, veterinary science and animal husbandry as nonspecific pharmacy raising the organism resistance to the action of different unfavourable factors is proved.
Inhumation
Definition:
(n.) The act of inhuming or burying; interment.
(n.) The act of burying vessels in warm earth in order to expose their contents to a steady moderate heat; the state of being thus exposed.
(n.) Arenation.
Example Sentences:
(1) For three of these major causes of suffocation and strangulation deaths among infants and children (refrigerator or freezer entrapment, suffocation by plastic bag, and inhumation at construction sites), there appears to have been a significant decline in incidence; however, there is no evidence of a significant reduction in deaths from mechanical strangulation in cribs.
(2) The inhumation and cremation burials from two tumulus cemeteries of the Hallstatt period (750-500 BC), Dietfurt and Schirndorf, which are both located in the Upper Palatinate, Bavaria, were used as illustrations.
(3) A few years later, countermeasures were introduced to prevent deaths resulting from suffocation by plastic bags, inhumation, and mechanical strangulation from wedging in infant cribs.
(4) Using the described methods, the following data relating to age-structure for the inhumation burials of both Hallstatt cemeteries could be attained.
(5) Pathological findings from early Iron Age inhumation burials from three cemeteries of the Hallstatt Period (Beilngries, Dietfurt and Schirndorf) in the Upper Palatinate (Bavaria) were compiled.