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Businesses primarily engaged in manufacturing corn oil and its byproducts are classified in SIC 2046
Corn :) BTW Corn and Maize are the same thing! :)
Actual corn-based foods are quite few: corn, corn bread, corn meal, products that have corn meal as a breading used before frying or baking, and of course corn flakes breakfast cereal. When you get into those that use corn byproducts, though, practically every processed food will have one or more.
establishments primarily engaged in milling corn or sorghum grain (milo) by the wet process, and producing starch, syrup, oil, sugar, and byproducts, such as gluten feed and meal.
Sugar is made from sugar cane, corn, or fruit. No animal products or byproducts are involved.
Two possible byproducts of friction include change in acceleration and release of heat.
Yes, it can. Corn oil is composed of chain molecules, and it won't oxidize in a simple reaction. But it will oxidize. The chains break and a number of different combustion byproducts are possible. Corn oil (and other cooking oils - used oil!) are burned in some internal combustion engines.
corn and corn and corn
corn and corn and corn
This industry comprises establishments primarily engaged in milling corn or sorghum grain (milo) by the wet process, and producing starch, syrup, oil, sugar, and byproducts, such as gluten feed and meal. Also included in this industry are establishments p
ethanol and carbon dioxide