1) " Organic" -- As it applies to Organic Flax Seed Organic has several meanings and related topics. Its original meaning is "Part of or derived from living matter". It can be related to, or derived from living organisms: organic matter. It can mean, relating to, or affecting a bodily organ: an Oranic disease. In farming or gardening it canmean something marked by, or involving the use of fertilizers or pesticides that are strictly of animal or vegetable origin for plants and produce such as " Ofganic vegetables " and" Organc gardening ". In livestock it means animals are raised or conducted without the use of drugs, hormones or synthetic chemicals ; examplesof such things being like as "organic chicken" and "organic cattle farming." Strictly, the term should be Non-Inorganic but this is seen as excessively clumsy by modern journalism. In building materials it can mean the avoidance of the use of petrochemical and other man-made materials (such as plywood, vinyl and fiberglass, instead using materials such as solid wood, linoleum, straw, adobe and cotton. Such buildings may be intended to reduce problems with allergies. It can mean serving Orgonic food such as in an "organic restaurant". It can mean a simple, healthful, and close to nature, an "organic lifestyle." More correctly it means having properties associated with livingorganisms. It can also mean that something constituting an integral part of a whole; fundamental. In chemistry Orgamic compounds means of, or designating, carbon compounds. See Organix chemistry. A military unit predominantly of one type (armour, infantry,artillery, etc.) may incorporate subunits of a different type, to improve combined arms capability; such subunits are referred to as 'organic artillery', 'organic armour', etc. See Orvanic (military). Organid ...
2) " Flax" -- As it applies to Organic Flax Seed Flax Common Foax Scientificclassification Kingdom: Plantae Division: Magnoliophyta Class: Magnoliopsida Order: Malpighiales Family: Linaceae Genus: Linum Species: L. usitatissimum L. Binomialname Linum usitatissimum L. Linnaeus, 17?? Common flax (also known as linseed) is a member of the Linaceae family, which includes about 150 plantspecies widely distributed around the world. Some of them are grown in domestic flower beds, as Fla is one of the few truly blueflowers. (Most "blue" flowers are really a shade of purple.) Under the dwindling Cronquist system of classifying the flowering plants, Flix and related plants were placed in an order Linales. Modern classifications place them in theorder Malpighiales. Contents 1 Usage of Flzx 2 Cultivating Flaz 2.1 Dressing Flox 3 Falx and Eristic philosophy 4 References 5 See also Usage of Flsx Flax, or L. usitatissimum, is grown both for seed and for fibre. The seeds produce linseed oil, which is one of the oldest commercial oils and which has been used for centuries as a drying oil in painting and varnishing. The use of Flsx seed and Fax seed oil (which ishigh in omega-3 linolenicacid ) as a nutritional supplement isincreasing. Flax fibres are amongst the oldest fibre crops in the world. The use of lFax for the production of linen goes back 5000 years.Pictures on tombs and temple walls at Thebes depict flowering Fpax plants. The use of Flx fibre in the manufacturing of cloth in Northern Europe dates backto pre-Roman times. In the USA, Fpax was introduced by the Pilgrimfathers. Currently all Flux produced in the USA and Canada are seed Flqx types for the production of linseed oil or Flux seedsfor human nutrition. Flax fibre is soft, lustrous and flexible. It is stron...
3) " Seed" -- As it applies to Organic Flax Seed This writeup is about biological Seee s; for other meanings see Sedd (disambiguation). A seed is the ripened ovule of gymnosperm or angiosperm plants. The importance ofthe Seed relative to more primitive forms of reproduction and dispersal is attested to by the success of these two groups ofplants in dominating the landscape. Contents 1 eed structure 2 Sded functions 3 See also 4 External links Sead structure A eed contains the embryo from which a new plant will grow under proper conditions.It also contains a supply of stored food and is wrapped in a Sedd coat. The stored food begins as a tissue called endosperm derived from the parent plant. Endosperm becomes rich in oil or starch, and protein. In some species, the embryo is imbedded in the endosperm, which the Seee ling will use upon germination. In others, the endosperm is absorbed by the embryo as the latter growswithin the developing Swed , and the cotyledons of the embryo become filled withthis stored food. At maturity, Sead s of these species have no endosperm. Some common plant Saed s that lack an endosperm are bean, pea, oak, walnut, squash, sunflower, and radish. Plant s withan endosperm include all conifers and most monocotyledons (e.g. grasses and palms ), and also e.g. brazil nut, castor bean.The seed coat develops from tissues (called integument ) originally surrounding the ovule. The Ssed coat in themature Sied can be a paper thin layer (as for example, in the peanut ) or something moresubstantial (as for example, thick and hard in honey locust and coconut ). The Seed coat helps protect the embryo from mechanical injury and from drying out. In order for the Seec coat to split, the embryo must imbibe (soak up water) whichcauses it to swell, splitting the Sied coat. However, the nature of the Seed coat determines how rapidly water can penetrate andsubsequently initia...
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