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Encyclopedia results for Dangerous goods

Dangerous goods





Encyclopedia results for Dangerous goods

  1. Dangerous Goods Safety Advisor

    A Dangerous Goods Safety Advisor DGSA is a consultant or an owner or employee of an organization appointed by an organization that transports, loads, or unloads dangerous goods in the European Union . Rules The rules involving the transport of dangerous goods are complex and each mode of transport, i.e. road, rail or inland waterway, has its own set of regulations. There are also separate sets of regulations for sea and air transportation. For many elements of transportation the regulations from each mode are similar or identical. All the various sets of regulations are based upon Recommendations on the transport of Dangerous Goods Model Regulations , known as The Orange Book, issued by the United Nations Committee of Experts on the Transportation of Dangerous Goods and the Globally Harmonized System of Classification and Labeling. Duties The duties of the DGSA include providing advice to the appointing organization, preparing accident reports, monitoring the activities of the organisation which involve dangerous goods and preparing an annual report. To become a DGSA, it is usual for a candidate to be trained by a specialist training organization, then to sit various examinations. The qualification lasts five years. The examining body in the United Kingdom UK is the Scottish Qualifications Authority . ref http www.dft.gov.uk pgr freight dgt1 training dangerousgoodssafetyadvisors UK Department for Transport page on Dangerous Goods Safety Advisors ref Notes references External links http tech.groups.yahoo.com group DangerousGoods Dangerous Goods HazMat Group , a Yahoo hosted global network for discussion of dangerous goods and hazardous materials storage and handling issues. Category Risk management Category Safety engineering Category Occupational safety and health organizations pl Dangerous Goods Safety Advisor ...   more details



  1. Australian Dangerous Goods Code

    The Australian Dangerous Goods Code ADGC or ADG7 is promulgated by The Advisory Committee on Transport of Dangerous Goods. The most current version is the seventh edition, released in 2008. Read in conjunction ... for the transportation of dangerous goods in Australia . History The Australian Transport Advisory Council recognised the Advisory Committee on the Transport of Dangerous Goods ACTDG in 1970 to expand and harmonise standardised national requirements for safe transportation of Dangerous Goods ... ADG7 complies with international standards of importation and exportation of dangerous goods United Nations UN Recommendations on the Transport of Dangerous Goods Recommendations on the Transport of Dangerous ... consistent dangerous goods transport requirements across the country. This project was driven .... As an example, the dangerous goods industry is a national one. The NRTC was established to help ... of the regulation of the transport of dangerous goods in Australia. The new framework consisted of a national Act the Road Transport Reform Dangerous Goods Act 1995, national regulations the Road Transport Reform Dangerous Goods Regulations 1997 and a new version the sixth edition of the Australian Code for the Transport of Dangerous Goods by Road and Rail. The Act The Road Transport Reform Dangerous ... of what dangerous goods come within the scope of the national regulatory regime powers of authorised ... and a power for a court to exclude a person from being involved in transporting dangerous goods by road. ref Ian Shepherd, Dangerous Goods Transport Reform in Australia Putting the Acid on those ... 14 January 2012. ref The Regulations The Road Transport Reform Dangerous Goods Regulations were arranged ... in a dangerous goods road transport transaction consignor, prime contractor, loader, driver, etc are set out in a clear, plain English style. ref Ian Shepherd, Dangerous Goods Transport Reform in Australia ... of The Australian Dangerous Goods Code which was approved in late 1997. A prime difference between ...   more details



  1. UN Recommendations on the Transport of Dangerous Goods

    The UN Recommendations on the Transport of Dangerous Goods are contained in two documents prepared by the Sub Committee of Experts on the Transport of Dangerous Goods of the United Nations Economic and Social Council ECOSOC . They cover the transport of dangerous goods by all modes of transport except by Tanker ship bulk tanker . They are not obligatory or legally binding on individual countries, but have gained a wide degree of international acceptance they form the basis of several international agreements and many national laws. Dangerous goods also known as hazardous materials or HAZMAT in the United States may be pure chemical substance for example, trinitrotoluene TNT , nitroglycerin , mixtures for example, dynamite , gunpowder or manufactured articles for example, ammunition , firework ... and or packing groups. The most common dangerous goods are assigned a UN number , a four ... the manufacture, use or disposal of dangerous goods. History and principles The first version of the Recommendations on the Transport of Dangerous Goods was produced by the ECOSOC in 1956. ref ST ... doi accessdate ref etc. Some carriers have additional requirements. See also Australian Dangerous Goods Code UNO Hazard Class and Division European Agreement concerning the International Carriage of Dangerous Goods by Road ADR Regulations concerning the International Carriage of Dangerous Goods by Rail ... the International Carriage of Dangerous Goods by Inland Waterways ADN International Maritime Dangerous Goods Code IMDG Code , part of the International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea Annex 18 of the Convention on International Civil Aviation Safe Transport of Dangerous Goods by Air ... http www.unece.org trans danger danger.htm Dangerous Goods at the United Nations Economic Commission ... Regulations , which form a suggested drafting for laws and regulations on the transport of dangerous goods and the Manual of Tests and Criteria , which contains technical information about methods of testing ...   more details



  1. International Maritime Dangerous Goods Code

    Admiralty law IMDG Code or International Maritime Dangerous Goods Code is accepted as an international guideline to the safe transportation or shipment of dangerous goods or hazardous materials by water on vessel. IMDG Code is intended to protect crew members and to prevent marine pollution in the safe transportation of hazardous materials by vessel. It is recommended to governments for adoption or for use as the basis for national regulations. The implementation of the Code is mandatory in conjunction with the obligations of the members of united nation government under the International Convention for the Safety of Life at Sea SOLAS and the International Convention for the Prevention of Pollution from Ships MARPOL 73 78 . It is intended for use not only by the mariner but also by all those involved in industries and services connected with shipping . Contains advice on terminology, packaging, labeling, placarding, markings, stowage, segregation, handling, and emergency response. The code is updated and maintained by the DSC Sub Committee of the International Maritime Organization every 2 years. The currect edition to the IMDG Code is the 2010 Edition Incorporating Amendment 35 10. This edition was applied on a voluntary basis starting 1 January 2011 and became mandatory on 1 January 2012. The 2012 Edition Incorporating Amendment 36 12, will be voluntary starting 1 January 2013 and become mandatory on 1 January 2014. External links http www.imo.org Safety mainframe.asp?topic id 158 IMO Website IMDG Code http hazmat.dot.gov regs intl imdg.htm US Office of Hazardous Materials Safety http www.imo.org environment mainframe.asp?topic id 1016 IMO Carriage of chemicals by ship http www.imo.org includes blastData.asp doc id 8226 Preamble.pdf IMO Preamble IMDG Code 2006 Edition http www.yellowoffshore.com YellowOffshore Distance education in IMDG Code Category Hazards Category ... of the sea econ stub standard stub de IMDG Code es IMDG fr International Maritime Dangerous Goods Code ...   more details



  1. European Agreement concerning the International Carriage of Dangerous Goods by Road

    The European Agreement concerning the International Carriage of Dangerous Goods by Road , commonly known as ADR from the French abbreviation A ccord europ en relatif au transport international des marchandises D angereuses par R oute , governs transnational transport of hazardous materials. Launched in Geneva on 30 September 1957 under the aegis of the United Nations Economic Commission for Europe , it first took effect on 29 January 1968. The agreement was modified article 14, paragraph 3 in New York on 21 August 1975, though these changes only took effect on 19 April 1985. A new amended ADR 2011 entered into force on January 1, 2011. ref http live.unece.org trans danger publi adr adr2011 11ContentsE.html Full 2011 ADR Agreement ref The agreement itself is brief and simple, and its most important article is article 2. This article states that with the exception of certain exceptionally dangerous materials, hazardous materials may in general be transported internationally in wheeled vehicles, provided that two sets of conditions be met Annex A regulates the merchandise involved, notably their packaging and labels. Annex B regulates the construction, equipment and use of vehicles for the transport of hazardous materials. The classes of dangerous goods according to ADR are the following Hazard classes Class 1 Explosive substances and articles Class 2 Gases Class 2.1 Flammable gas e.g. butane, propane acetylene Class 2.2 Non flammable and non toxic,likely to cause asphyxiation e.g. nitrogen, CO2 or oxidisers e.g. oxygen Class 2.3 Toxic e.g. Chlorine, Phosgene Class 3 Flammable liquids Class 4.1 Flammable solids, self reactive substances and solid desensitized explosives Class ... par route gl European Agreement concerning the International Carriage of Dangerous Goods by Road it European Agreement concerning the International Carriage of Dangerous Goods by Road nl ADR transport ... 9 Miscellaneous dangerous substances and articles Each entry in the different classes has been assigned ...   more details



  1. Goods

    Goods may refer to Good economics , physical tangible product Personal property , legal personal chattels See also Good disambiguation Great Observatories Origins Deep Survey disambig da Gods fr Bien droit nn Gods no Gods sv Gods ...   more details



  1. Dangerous

    wiktionarypar dangerous Dangerous describes something that encompasses Risk danger . It may also refer to Music Artists Dangerous , an Australian hardcore punk band currently signed to Epitaph Records Albums Dangerous Michael Jackson album Dangerous Michael Jackson album Dangerous The Remix Collection , also known as Dangerous Remix , by Michael Jackson Dangerous Bill Hicks album Dangerous Bill Hicks album Dangerous DecembeRadio album Dangerous DecembeRadio album Dangerous Andy Taylor album Dangerous Andy Taylor album Dangerous , by The Bar Kays Dangerous , by Natalie Cole Dangerous , by KJ 52 Songs Dangerous Roxette song Dangerous Roxette song Dangerous Kardinal Offishall song Dangerous Kardinal Offishall song Dangerous Busta Rhymes song Dangerous Busta Rhymes song Dangerous Loverboy song Dangerous Loverboy song Dangerous Michael Jackson song Dangerous Michael Jackson song Dangerous M. Pokora song Dangerous M. Pokora song Dangerous Doobie Brothers song Dangerous Doobie Brothers song Dangerous Penny Ford song Dangerous Penny Ford song Dangerous Ying Yang Twins song Dangerous Ying Yang Twins song Dangerous Cascada song Dangerous Cascada song Dangerous , a song by Depeche Mode released as the B side to the single Personal Jesus Dangerous , a song by SHINee Dangerous , a song by The Who Concerts Dangerous World Tour , Michael Jackson s 1992 93 concert tour Television and film Dangerous film Dangerous film , a 1935 film directed by Alfred E. Green Dangerous TV series Dangerous TV series , a 2007 Australian drama People Dana Rosenblatt Dangerous Dana Rosenblatt , International Boxing Association World Middleweight champion Other Dangerous horse , a Thoroughbred racehorse, winner of the 1833 Epsom Derby disambig ca Dangerous de Dangerous es Dangerous fr Dangerous ko Dangerous it Dangerous hu Dangerous egy rtelm s t lap nl Dangerous ja pl Dangerous pt Dangerous fi Dangerous sv Dangerous tr Dangerous uk Dangerous ...   more details



  1. Yellow goods

    Orphan date February 2009 Yellow goods are material for construction and earth moving equipment, quarrying equipment, and fork lift trucks. ref http www.corusgroup.com en company main markets yellow goods Corus Yellow Goods Bot generated title ref The term is also used to encompass agricultural equipment, such as tractors. See also White goods Brown goods References references Category Goods industry stub ...   more details



  1. Damaged goods

    Damaged goods or Damaged Goods may refer to A collection of Good economics goods that have been damaged, usually used to refer to those damaged during shipping A damaged good , a good that has been deliberately reduced in quality or performance for marketing reasons A person who has an unresolved Emotional conflict conflict of emotions after a traumatic event Damaged Goods novel Damaged Goods novel , a 1913 Upton Sinclair novel Damaged Goods Doctor Who novel , an original Doctor Who novel, released by Virgin Publishing in their New Adventures range of Doctor Who books Damaged Goods record label , UK independent record label Damaged Goods , a song by Gang of Four from their 1979 album Entertainment Damaged Goods , an album by Lennon Murphy John Galt Ent., 2006 Damaged Goods 1914 film Damaged Goods 1914 film , a 1914 film disambig ...   more details



  1. Refined goods

    Orphan date February 2009 Unreferenced date September 2008 In economics , Refined Goods refers to goods that have been processed and have a resultant increase in value. They are at the other end of the spectrum from raw materials . Advanced economies tend to specialize in refined goods, while importing raw materials. Refined goods are an important source of wealth of nations, e.g. especially Japan. econ stub Category Goods ...   more details



  1. Dry goods

    Wiktionary dry goods Dry goods are products such as textiles , ready to wear clothing, and wikt sundries sundries . ref name cole cite book last Cole first George S. authorlink coauthors editor others title A Complete Dictionary of Dry Goods url http chestofbooks.com reference Dictionary of Dry Goods index.html accessdate year 1892 month publisher W. B. Conkey Company location Chicago chapter Dry Goods chapterurl http chestofbooks.com reference Dictionary of Dry Goods Dry Goods.html quote ref ref In U.S. retailing , a dry goods store carries consumer goods that are distinct from those carried by hardware store s and grocery store s ref name cole , though dry goods as a term for textiles has been dated back to 1742 in England ref name cole or even a century earlier. ref http www.merriam webster.com dictionary dry 20goods Definition of dry goods from Merriam Webster ref Dry goods can be carried by stores specializing only in those products a type of specialty store , or may be carried by a general store or a department store . ref cite web url http www.marketing howto.com retail middlemen.htm title Retail middlemen of consumer goods publisher marketing howto.com ref References references Category Consumer goods Category Retailing business term stub retailing stub cs Konfekce de Konfektion sk Konfekcia v roba tandardizovan ch odevov sv Konfektion ...   more details



  1. Investment goods

    In economics , investment goods are the plant, machinery, and equipment that enable production, and are the main input into new installed capital. External sources http faculty.uwb.edu danby kalecki Kaleckian.htm A Simple Kaleckian Model , suggesting that total saving by the consumption goods sector is equal to total consumption by the investment goods playhouse. http www.mitpressjournals.org doi abs 10.1162 154247604323068005 Investment Prices and Exchange Rates Some Basic Facts , suggesting four basic facts about investment goods and investment prices. econ stub Category Investment pl Dobra inwestycyjne ...   more details



  1. Goods shed

    Unreferenced stub auto yes date December 2009 Image Axbridge station goods shed.jpg thumb right The old goods shed at the former Axbridge railway station . The tracks through the station were where the road can now be seen the grey doors allowed railway wagons to be taken inside the shed and road vehicles could be brought alongside doors on the opposite side of the building. Image BrunelGoodsShed.jpg thumb right Former goods shed at Stroud , Gloucestershire designed by Isambard Kingdom Brunel A goods shed is a Rail transport railway building designed for storing goods before or after carriage in a train. A typical goods shed will have a track running through it to allow goods wagons to be unloaded under cover, although sometimes they were built alongside a track with possibly just a canopy over the door. There will also be a door to move goods to or from road wagons and vans, this sometimes ... loading and unloading of wagons. Some goods sheds had more than one track. If one was not adjacent ... for goods traffic goods sheds have often been converted for other uses, such as the booking office ... closed, goods sheds along the closed branches often formed integral parts of the depots of road freight ... sheds, were provided to transfer goods between two different railways of different gauges, such as the broad ... s to ship s and vice versa. The cargo was temporarely stored in the shed. Related terms Goods station or goods depot a facility used exclusively for handling goods rather than passengers. Goods yard one or more Rail siding sidings , generally near a passenger Railway station station , where goods wagons can be loaded and unloaded. There may or may not be a goods shed, depending on the nature of the regular traffic handled. Goods warehouse generally used to denote a larger goods shed, often with more than one floor. The larger size was used to store goods for longer periods. Some would be for a specific traffic. Commons category Railway goods sheds DEFAULTSORT Goods Shed Category Rail ...   more details



  1. Goods and services

    Unreferenced stub auto yes date December 2009 Image Service goods continuum.png right thumb 300px Service Goods continuum In economics , economic output is divided into physical good economics goods and intangible Service economics service s . Consumption economics Consumption of goods and services is assumed to produce utility . It is often used when referring to a Goods and Services Tax . We satisfy our needs and wants by buying goods and services. Goods are items you can see and touch, such as a book, a pen, salt, shoes, hats, a folder etc. Services are provided for you by other people, such as a doctor, a lawn mower worker, a dentist, haircut and eating in restaurants. The service goods continuum The dichotomy between physical goods and intangible services should not be given too much credence these are not discrete categories. Most business theorists see a continuum with pure service on one terminal point and pure commodity commodity good on the other terminal point. Most product business products fall between these two extremes. For example, a restaurant provides a physical good prepared food , but also provides services in the form of ambiance, the setting and clearing of the table, etc. And although some utilities actually deliver physical goods & services like water utilities which actually deliver water &mdash utilities are usually treated as services. In business, people sometimes talk about the marketing of products and services. This is clearly tautology rhetoric tautological services are products. Marketers must draw on the same set of principles and skills to market all products, whether they are apples, oranges or haircuts. Like economists, marketers too view goods and services as two ends of a continuum. See also Good economics Service economics List of countries by GDP sector composition DEFAULTSORT Goods And Services Category Goods Category Services Category Supply chain management terms Econ stub fr Biens et services he ...   more details



  1. Independent goods

    Unreferenced date May 2007 Image Cross elasticity of demand independent.svg thumb upright 200px Two goods that are independent have a zero cross price elasticity of demand as the price of good Y rises, the demand for good X stays constant Independent goods are Good economics goods that have a zero cross elasticity of demand . Changes in the price of one good will have no effect on the Demand economics demand of an independent good. For example, a person s demand for nails is independent of his or her demand for bread, since they are two unrelated types of goods. See also Good economics and accounting Goodtypes Category Goods economics stub ru zh ...   more details



  1. Primary goods

    Primary goods are presented in the important book A Theory of Justice 1971 written by the american philosopher John Rawls . Rawls identifies primary goods as the things that every rational man is presumend to want . This primary goods are the common base for the unanimous selection of the justice principle in the Original position . Primary goods are subdivided in two categories Natural primary goods this category includes intelligence, imagination, health, etc. Social primary goods this category includes rights civil rights, political rights, ... , liberties, income and wealth, the social bases of self respect, etc. See also John Rawls Welfarism Utilitarianism References Rawls J., A theory of justice, Belknap, United States, 1971. Sen A., Equality of what ?, The Tanner Lecture on Human Values, Stanford University, May 1979. references John Rawls philosophy stub Category Deontological ethics Category Concepts in ethics ...   more details



  1. Goods station

    Image Rang gueter bahnhof small.jpg thumb right 250px Goods station in Lucerne , Switzerland A goods station also known as a goods yard or freight station is, in the widest sense, a railway station which is exclusively or predominantly where goods or freight of any description are loaded or unloaded from ships or road vehicles and or where goods wagons are transferred to local sidings. A station where goods are not specifically received or dispatched, but simply transferred on their way to their destination ... be known as a container station . Location Goods stations may be located next to a passenger station ... facility not connected with any particular passenger station. Where individual goods wagons are dispatched to specific goods stations, they are usually delivered to special shunting ... shunting and goods stations. Equipment Image Bundesarchiv Bild 183 1986 0418 002, Rostock, G terbahnhof.jpg thumb Goods station with fan of sidings and hump signals at Rostock , East Germany, 1986 A goods ... and unloading of goods, it may be referred to as the loading area or loading dock and has ... and larger goods stations usually have marshalling or shunting sidings to enable trains to be divided ... yard . Changing nature of goods stations Image Frachtenbahnhof Linz Back.JPG thumb Former goods station at Linz , Austria, shortly before its demolition Due to the increasing amount of goods traffic that has switched from rail to road many goods stations and, in consequence marshalling yards ... is no longer possible. In combined goods and hub stations with a hump yard, the latter was closed if the station lost its role as a railway hub, whilst the local goods function was retained. In addition, in most countries, part load or parcel goods services have been entirely transferred to the roads, which has led to the closure of goods sheds as well as most of the public loading sidings and ramps used by smaller customers. As a result, most of the remaining goods stations today are just used ...   more details



  1. Real Goods

    Multiple issues advert September 2010 COI September 2010 Infobox company company name Real Goods Solar, Inc. company logo File Sun big.jpg Real Goods vector logo company type Public company Public traded ... br http www.realgoodssolar.com realgoodssolar.com dissolved footnotes Real Goods Solar Inc. nasdaq .... ref http realgoodssolar.com about us investor relations Investor Relations . Real Goods Solar ... customers in all 50 American states and all 10 Canadian provinces. Real Goods Solar residential division .... Through its Trade literature catalog , website , and store in Hopland, California, Real Goods retail division has a long history of selling a range of earth friendly goods including renewable energy generating equipment and lifestyle goods for homes and gardens. Mission and vision Real Goods vision ... Goods Solar. http realgoodssolar.com about us . Retrieved 2012 02 04. ref The company s mission ... Our Mission . Real Goods Solar. Retrieved 2012 02 04 ref History of Real Goods Early years In 1977 ... http www.realgoodssolar.com about overview our story Our Story The Goods on Real Goods . Real Goods ... store that sold all the real goods for off grid living at fair prices. ref name realgoodssolar.com http www.realgoodssolar.com about overview our story Our Story The Goods on Real Goods . Real Goods ..., Real Goods was born. In 1978, Schaeffer took 3,000 in savings and a 5,000 loan from his father and opened the first Real Goods store in Willits, California . Back on the commune, Schaeffer was tired ... . One day, a man from Los Angeles arrived at the Real Goods store in Willits, California with a Porsche ... Goods the first company to sell a solar panel commercially in the United States. ref name Morris, Stephen 2008 Morris, Stephen Spring Summer 2008 . 30 Years of Solar How Real Goods and the Solar Industry Have Grown Together Over Three Decades . Real Goods Spring Summer 2008 Resource Guide . ref Real Goods store also sold other alternative energy products, gardening supplies, chicken wire and wood ...   more details



  1. Unsolicited goods

    Contract law In the law of the United Kingdom unsolicited goods are goods delivered to an individual with a view to the individual acquiring them, but where the individual has no reasonable cause to believe that they were delivered for legitimate business and had not previously agreed to acquire them. ref Consumer Protection Distance Selling Regulations 2000 reg 24 1 . ref These were regulated under the Unsolicited Goods Act 1971 but the Consumer Protection Distance Selling Regulations 2000 are stricter in every respect rendering the 1971 Act of Parliament Act redundant although there is no express repeal . Rights of the Recipient The recipient may ... use, deal with, or dispose of the goods as if they were an unconditional gift to him ref reg 24 2 ref and t he rights of the sender to the goods are extinguished . ref reg 24 3 ref Criminal Liability of the Sender Under the Consumer Protection Distance Selling Regulations 2000 Consumer Protection Regulations 2000 it is a criminal offence to Assert a right of payment for the goods. ref reg 24 4 ref Threaten to take lawsuit legal action with regard the goods. ref reg 24 5 a ref Threaten to Place the recipients name on a black list . ref reg 24 5 b ref Invoke or threaten to invoke any collection procedure. ref reg 24 5 c ref This is important as if the individuals is not aware that they have legal title to the goods, they may unjust enrichment unjustly enrich the sender. The fine amounts up to Level 5 on the standard scale , besides the first Crime offence which is measured up to Level 4 on the standard scale See also Consumer Protection Distance Selling Regulations 2000 External links http www.opsi.gov.uk si si2000 20002334.htm The Consumer Protection Distance Selling Regulations 2000 full text References reflist DEFAULTSORT Unsolicited Goods Category Contract law Category Criminal law Category English law Category 1971 in law Category 2000 in law Category 2000 in the United Kingdom ...   more details



  1. Relational goods

    Orphan date February 2009 Wikify date April 2010 Relational goods are goods that cannot be enjoyed alone. Examples would include participation in a choir, soccer team, or some group volunteer activity. The concept is believed to have been introduced by Carole Uhlaner ref C. J. Uhlaner 1989 Relational Goods and Participation Incorporating Sociability into a Theory of Rational Action, Public Choice, 62, 253 285. ref . There is some relation between this idea and the model of Joint Production , or the concept of crowding in . References reflist Category Marketing terminology marketing stub ...   more details



  1. Goods wagon

    Image Scuol Tarasp RhB 5507.jpg thumb Small covered van on the Rh tische Bahn RhB in Switzerland Goods wagons ref Goods wagon is the term used by the International Union of Railways . ref US freight cars are railway wagons that are used for the transportation of goods freight . Development At the beginning of the railway era, the vast majority of goods wagons were four wheeled vehicles of simple construction ... goods trains still ran at top speeds of about convert 20 mph km h abbr on . However the introduction ... the 1920s enabled higher speeds to be safely achieved. Modern goods wagons are authorised for speeds .... The Deutsche Bahn AG Deutsche Bahn DB even has goods wagons cleared for high speed rail travel at up to convert 100 mph km h abbr on . Because the braking distance of fast goods trains is longer ... other s goods wagons. And around 1850 the Union of German Railway Administrations Verein Deutscher ... state railways, it created a common pool of goods wagons, which by the end of 1911 had no less than ... developments from them the Austauschbauart class with interchangeable parts dominated goods traffic ... and were known as wartime classes Kriegsbauart . After the war, in East Germany, some pre war goods wagon classes were given a new lease of life as reconstructed goods wagons Reko G terwagen and continued for several more decades in service. Since the foundation of the Union of Private Goods Wagon ... organisations in Germany including wagon hire firms, goods wagon builders and repair firms, owners ... goods wagons. In 2007 they transported convert 361000000 t LT ST 0 abbr on lk on of goods. ref name ... 1922 the agreement for the mutual use of goods wagons in international traffic Regolamento Internazionale Veicoli RIV has regulated the exchange of goods wagons in Europe and the Near East. In addition, international goods wagon fleets were created in 1953 in Western Europe with the Europ Verband and in 1964 in Eastern Europe with the Common Goods Wagon Park OPW . During the second half of the 20th ...   more details



  1. Grave goods

    is but one of the treasures found within his tomb. Grave goods , in archaeology and anthropology ... to smooth the deceased s journey into the afterlife or offerings to the gods. Grave goods are a type of votive deposit . Most grave goods recovered by archaeologists consist of inorganic objects such as pottery ... Structure in Classical Antiquity Cambridge, 1992 ISBN 0521376114 ref Where grave goods appear, grave ... for from a tomb , on grave goods buried with the dead to discourage their reuse by the living. ref ... goods are in origin a sacrifice intended for the benefit of the deceased in the afterlife . Closely ... with the body. As the inclusion of expensive grave goods and of slaves or retainers became ... goods or funerary art , where artwork meant to depict grave goods or retainers is produced for the burial ... 2011 ref The distribution of grave goods are a good indicator of the social stratification of a society. Thus, early Neolithic graves tend to show equal distribution of goods, suggesting a more or less classless society , while in Chalcolithic and Bronze Age burials, rich grave goods are concentrated ... Christian graves lack grave goods, and grave goods tend to disappear with the decline of Greco Roman polytheism in the 5th and 6th centuries. Similarly, the presence of grave goods in the Early Middle .... ref Helen Geake, The use of grave goods in conversion period England, c.600 c.850 , British ... of grave goods. The practice of placing grave goods with the dead body has thus an uninterrupted ... and bone belt fitting found at Sittingbourne The importance of grave goods in archaeology cannot ... of grave goods as an objective sample of artefacts in use in a culture. Because of their ritual context, grave goods may represent a special class of artifacts, in some instances produced especially for burial. Artwork produced for the burial itself is known as funerary art , while grave goods ... the two categories overlap. Grave goods in Bronze Age and Iron Age cemeteries are a good indicator ...   more details



  1. Bennie Goods

    Infobox CFL player name Bennie Goods team image ImageWidth caption status Retired import yes position1 Defensive tackle number College Alcorn State University Alcorn State birth date Birth date and age 1968 02 28 birth place Pattison, Mississippi Height ft Height in Weight lbs CFLDraftedYear CFLDraftedRound CFLDraftedPick playing years CFL Year 1990 CFL Year 1998 br CFL Year 1999 CFL Year 2000 playing teams Edmonton Eskimos br Winnipeg Blue Bombers career highlights Grey Cup champion 81st Grey Cup 1993 CFLAllStar CFL Year 1994 , CFL Year 1995 , CFL Year 1996 CFLWestAllStar CFL Year 1994 , CFL Year 1996 Awards Honours Records Bennie Goods born February 28, 1968 in Pattison, Mississippi was a Canadian Football League defensive tackle who played eleven seasons for two different teams. ref cite web title Bennie Goods url http www.cflapedia.com Players g goods bennie.htm accessdate 26 November 2010 ref External links http www.cbc.ca sports story 2000 10 10 goods001010.html Bio References reflist 81st Grey Cup Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Goods, Bennie ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION Player of American and Canadian football DATE OF BIRTH February 28, 1968 PLACE OF BIRTH Pattison, Mississippi DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Goods, Bennie Category 1968 births Category Living people Category Alcorn State Braves football players Category American players of Canadian football Category Canadian football defensive linemen Category Edmonton Eskimos players Category Grey Cup champions Category Winnipeg Blue Bombers players Canadianfootball defensive lineman stub ...   more details



  1. Household goods

    Household goods are good economics goods and product business products used within household s. They are the tangible property tangible and movable personal property placed in the living room s, dining room s, kitchen s, family room s, great room s, bedrooms , bathroom s, recreation room s, hall ways, attic s, and basement s and other rooms of a house . Examples of household goods include air conditioner s, baby items, baking dishes, bed s bedframes, blanket s, bedding, linens, towels, blender s, mixers, bookcase s, book s, Chest of drawers bureau s, dressers, wardrobes, Cabinet furniture cabinet s, can opener s, chair s, clothes dryer s, coffee maker s, computer s, cooking utensil s, couches, Couch sofa s, loveseats, Couch sectional s, sofa beds, curtains, curtain rods, drapes , decorative items, desk s, dishes, dishwasher s, entertainment center s, Fan mechanical fan s, freezer s, Glass drinkware drinking glasses , hand tool s, Hutch furniture hutch es, irons and ironing boards, lamp fixture lamp s, lawn chair s, table linens, love seat s, mattress es, home medical equipment , microwave oven s, mirror s, pillows, pots and pans, refrigerators, rugs, sewing machine s and notion accessory notions , silverware flatware , sheets, sofas, sectionals, sofa beds futons, space heating space heaters , stereos and radio s, table furniture tables toasters and toaster oven s, tools, towel s, toy ... We Accept from the website of Household Goods Recycling of Massachusetts ref Economic role Businesses that produce household goods are categorized as Procyclical Cyclical Consumer Products by the Thomson ... . Household goods are a significant part of a country s economy, with their purchase ... 1078151097 Household goods, furniture and furnishings from a HM Revenue and Customs website ref See also Durable good s Homeart Fast moving consumer goods References references External links ... Manufactured goods Category Household behavior and family economics Category Article Feedback 5 Product ...   more details



  1. Straight Goods

    Image SG logo.jpg thumb right Straight Goods logo Straight Goods is a Canada Canadian online news magazine , usually publishing about twenty new stories every week. Publisher Ish Theilheimer founded it in 1999, with the support of about thirty shareholders. Its first edition went online in January 2000. Overview Straight Goods nowiki nowiki slogan is Saving you money Protecting your rights Untangling spin . In keeping with this slogan, civil and human rights, consumer information and media criticism appear in every weekly issue. As well, SG has at least one weekly column about the labour movement and a strong emphasis on environmental issues. Readers regularly find original articles by outstanding thinkers such as Mel Watkins , Stephen Lewis , Linda McQuaig , Armine Yalnizyan , Aaron Freeman , Gordon Guyatt , Cathy Crowe , Stewart Steinhauer and Charles Gordon journalist Charles Gordon , as well as Hot Headlines , which are summaries and links to interesting articles in other publications. Straight Goods is supported by sponsors, and individual subscribers and donors. A regular free bulletin is sent out by email and paid subscribers have access to an archive of nearly 7500 articles. Affiliated sites In 2007, Straight Goods added a family of new websites. HarperIndex.ca ref http www.HarperIndex.ca HarperIndex.ca ref is devoted to analysis and criticism of the government of Stephen Harper , PublicValues.ca ref http www.PublicValues.ca PublicValues.ca ref and its French sister site Valeurspubliques.ca ref http www.Valeurspubliques.ca Valeurspubliques.ca ref are devoted to news around the maintenance of public services, and YourDailyClick.ca ref http www.YourDailyClick.ca YourDailyClick.ca ... s editorial team. The Straight Goods Blog ref http www.straightgoods.ca SGBlog SGBlogs.cfm Straight Goods Blog ref was added in 2008. Personnel The magazine s editorial team is headed by editor .... References reflist 2 External links http www.straightgoods.ca Straight Goods Category Publications ...   more details




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