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Phenol Formaldehyde Resin as a Casting Material

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 May 2009

Extract

The remarkable properties that synthetic resins possess make these substances of inestimable value in biological and geological laboratories and museums. Their applications in the biological sciences have been discussed by Hibbin (1937) and by Knight (1937). Bell (1939) and Shrock (1940) have indicated some of the geological methods employing polymerized methyl methacrylate; the material is remarkably transparent and this property tends to detract from the value of the plastic as a casting substance of fossils for, in such work, an opaque material is desirable.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1940

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References

REFERENCES

Bell, J. F., 1939. Notes on the uses of methyl methacrylate “ Lucite ” in a geological laboratory. Economic Geology, xxxiv, 804811.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hibben, J. H., 1937. The preservation of biological specimens by means of transparent plastics. Science, lxxxvi, 247–8.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Knight, H. G., 1937. The preservation of biological specimens by meansx of transparent plastics. Science, lxxxvi, 333–4.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shrock, R. R., 1940. “ Lucite ” as an aid in studying the hard parts of living and fossil animais. Journ. Paleontology, xiv, 86–8.Google Scholar