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kauri gum Meaning in Bengali



 কৌরি জতু,

Noun:

Kauri আঠা,





kauri gum's Usage Examples:

kauri timber and kauri gum.


The museum has over 4000 sq metres of undercover exhibits, including the largest collection of kauri gum in the world, and.


Subfossil copal is also well known from New Zealand (kauri gum from Agathis australis (Araucariaceae)), Japan, the Dominican Republic.


gummosa, gum guaiacum from the lignum vitae trees of the genus Guaiacum, kauri gum from trees of Agathis australis, hashish (Cannabis resin) from Cannabis.


Aranga was a centre of the kauri gum industry from 1887 until the late 1940s, one of the last gum extraction.


The forest was originally planted on poor kauri gum fields.


Fossicking for semi-precious stones such as carnelian and for kauri gum are popular activities among tourists visiting the town.


As his business prospered, he traded in kauri gum and tea and operated a bond store.


European settlers started to arrive, concentrating on timber milling, kauri gum digging and flax milling, with brickworks and pottery industries following.


After the gold rush many moved to Northland attracted by kauri gum-digging, then a major source of income for Northland Māori and settlers.


The soot from burnt kauri gum was also mixed with fat to make pigment.


Stillwater was also used as a secondary landing to transport logs, kauri gum and later fruit produce from orchards established on cleared land at Stillwater.


He eventually found work as a kauri gum digger in Northland while his family remained in Auckland.


Various species of kauri give diverse resins such as kauri gum.


Founded[when?] during the 19th-century kauri gum and timber trade, it briefly[when?] had New Zealand's largest population.



Synonyms:

kauri copal; kauri; copal; kauri resin;

Antonyms:

fauna;

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