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Because microbiologically the planet is now a world away from what it was in the 1930s too.
Commercial African sorghum beer is packaged in a microbiologically active state.
But if you want me to spell it out, I'm saying that we don't know what is happening here, microbiologically I mean.
This oxidation relies on a combination of chemically and microbiologically catalyzed processes.
Do you need to have any food samples tested, chemically or microbiologically, to make sure they comply with food safety requirements?
However, the microbiologically active characteristic of the beer also increases the safety of the product by creating competition between organisms.
This can be accompanied by microbiologically influenced corrosion (MIC).
Singapore has a siege mentality about disease, much as it does about other security issues, because it exists in a microbiologically turbulent region.
For all their enthusiasm for innovation and traditional interest in microbiologically produced foods, the Japanese were the first to ban the production of single-cell proteins.
Customers will be able to identify depurated clams by the orange mesh bags and federally mandated tags that read "microbiologically cleaned."
They discovered that cortisone could be microbiologically oxidized to prednisone by the bacterium Corynebacterium simplex.
Microbiologically precipitated calcite has a wide range of applications, such as soil remidiation, soil stabilization and concrete repair.
More than half of cases of TB meningitis cannot be confirmed microbiologically, and these patients are treated on the basis of clinical suspicion only.
The majority of foods carry a 'best before' date but some short-life foods which are microbiologically highly perishable are marked with a 'use by'date.
Filtration serves to make wine completely clear and to eliminate any remaining yeast cells and bacteria, which could render the bottled wine microbiologically unstable.
Urine specimens showed that no other microbiologically active metabolites were present except cephaloridine and that cephaloridine is excreted unchanged.
This microbiologically produced recombinant enzyme, identical structurally to the calf derived enzyme, costs less and is produced in abundant quantities.
ICU Medical's line of needlefree connectors are mechanically and microbiologically closed systems help protect the patient's catheter from contamination that can otherwise lead to bloodstream infections.
Javaherdashti, R., "Microbiologically Influenced Corrosion-An Engineering Insight", Springer, UK, 2008.
Microbial corrosion, or commonly known as microbiologically influenced corrosion (MIC), is a corrosion caused or promoted by microorganisms, usually chemoautotrophs.
The laimosphere is the microbiologically enriched zone of soil that surrounds below-ground portions of plant stems; the laimosphere is analogous to the rhizosphere and spermosphere.
Microbiologically induced calcium carbonate precipitation (MICP) is a bio-geochemical process that induces calcium carbonate precipitation within the soil matrix.
These recommendations assume that the organism is susceptible to the medications, adherence to the regimen has been ensured by directly observed therapy, and the child has responded clinically and microbiologically to therapy.
The BRITA filter is not intended to purify water, and should not be used with water that is microbiologically unsafe or of unknown quality without adequate disinfection before or after the system.
In the process, the soil is first freed from all organisms and then revitalized and microbiologically buffered through the injection of a soil activator based on compost which contains a natural mixture of favorable microorganisms (e.g. Bacillus subtilis, etc.).