Extraction

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Extraction may refer to:

Contents

Science and technology

Biology and medicine

Computing and information science

Other uses in science and technology

Arts and entertainment

Other uses

See also

Related Research Articles

Natural resource Resources that exist without actions of humankind

Natural resources are resources that exist without any actions of humankind. This includes the sources of valued characteristics such as commercial and industrial use, aesthetic value, scientific interest and cultural value. On Earth, it includes sunlight, atmosphere, water, land, all minerals along with all vegetation, and animal life. Natural resources can be part of our natural heritage or protected in nature reserves.

Track or Tracks may refer to:

The Nexus is a Latin word for connection, usually where multiple elements meet. It may refer to:

Non-renewable resource

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Guardian or The Guardian may refer to:

Blackwater or Black Water may refer to:

Expose, exposé, or exposed may refer to:

Deadline(s) or The Deadline(s) may refer to:

Gravity, or gravitation, is the mass-proportionate force of attraction among matter.

Net Energy Gain (NEG) is a concept used in energy economics that refers to the difference between the energy expended to harvest an energy source and the amount of energy gained from that harvest. The net energy gain, which can be expressed in joules, differs from the net financial gain that may result from the energy harvesting process, in that various sources of energy can be priced differently for the same amount of energy.

Snake eyes is a roll of two dice, with one pip on each dice.

Root of all evil or Root of evil may refer to:

Open source products include permission to use the source code, design documents, or content of the product.

Recovery or Recover may refer to:

Neighbour, Neighbor, Neighbours or Neighbors may refer to:

DBpedia Online database project

DBpedia is a project aiming to extract structured content from the information created in the Wikipedia project. This structured information is made available on the World Wide Web. DBpedia allows users to semantically query relationships and properties of Wikipedia resources, including links to other related datasets.

Shale oil extraction Process for extracting oil from oil shale

Shale oil extraction is an industrial process for unconventional oil production. This process converts kerogen in oil shale into shale oil by pyrolysis, hydrogenation, or thermal dissolution. The resultant shale oil is used as fuel oil or upgraded to meet refinery feedstock specifications by adding hydrogen and removing sulfur and nitrogen impurities.

Knowledge extraction is the creation of knowledge from structured and unstructured sources. The resulting knowledge needs to be in a machine-readable and machine-interpretable format and must represent knowledge in a manner that facilitates inferencing. Although it is methodically similar to information extraction (NLP) and ETL, the main criteria is that the extraction result goes beyond the creation of structured information or the transformation into a relational schema. It requires either the reuse of existing formal knowledge or the generation of a schema based on the source data.

The following outline is provided as an overview of and topical guide to production:

The geology of Egypt includes rocks from Archaean - early Proterozoic times onwards. These oldest rocks are found as inliers in Egypt’s Western Desert. In contrast, the rocks of the Eastern Desert are largely late Proterozoic in age. Throughout the country this older basement is overlain by Palaeozoic sedimentary rocks. Cretaceous rocks occur commonly whilst sediments indicative of repeated marine transgression and regression are characteristic of the Cenozoic Era.