Natural material
A natural material a substance that comes from plants, animals, or the earth, and has not been made by humans[1]..[2][3] Minerals and the metals that can be extracted from them (without further modification) are also considered to belong into this category. Natural materials are used as building materials and clothing. Types include:
- Biotic materials
- Wood (rattan, bamboo, bark, etc.)
- Plant fiber (coir, ramie, sisal, cotton, flax, hemp, jute, kapok, kenaf, moss, linen, abacá, etc.)
- Animal fiber (wool, silk, alpaca, camel, angora, cashmere, mohair, etc.)
- Inorganic material
- Stone (flint, granite, limestone, obsidian, sandstone, sand, gems, glass, etc.)
- Native metal (copper, iron, gold, silver, etc.)
- Composites (clay, plasticine, etc.)
- Other natural materials.
- Soil
See also
- Alternative natural materials
- Dimension stone
- Earth shelter
- Earth structure
- Green building and wood
- Greystone (residential buildings made from limestone)
- Hempcrete
- Log house
- Material science
- Metamaterials
- Natural building
- Natural environment
- Natural product
- Natural resources
- Nature
- Rammed earth
- Straw-bale construction
References
- ↑ Vardhanabhuti, Saran; Ribaudo, Heather J.; Landovitz, Raphael J.; Ofotokun, Ighovwerha; Lennox, Jeffrey L.; Currier, Judith S.; Olson, Lana M.; Haas, David W. (2015). "Screening for UGT1A1 Genotype in Study A5257 Would Have Markedly Reduced Premature Discontinuation of Atazanavir for Hyperbilirubinemia". Open Forum Infectious Diseases. 2 (3). doi:10.1093/ofid/ofv085. ISSN 2328-8957.
- ↑ "What does natural material mean?". Retrieved 2 May 2018.
- ↑ "Synthetic and natural materials". GCSE Bitesize. BBC. Retrieved 2 May 2018.
Further reading
- DeMouthe JF (2006). Natural Materials: Sources, Properties, and Uses (1st ed.). Oxford: Architectural Press. ISBN 978-0-7506-6528-5.
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