whales
Its psychological. Some people are wheezy from the thought of touching a dead animal carcass. If they get sick from cooking it, maybe they're not cooking it correctly and need to find the correct cooking temperatures for that spcific type of meat.
No. While much soap production uses vegetable oils, animals fats are still used in some soaps. And to the question below- the President does not have the authority to make law. That is done by the Congress.
Cotton seeds are used for producing cottonseed oil, which is used in cooking, food products, and in the production of cosmetics and soaps. Additionally, cotton seeds are also used as animal feed and in some cases for planting to grow new cotton plants.
No. For cremation you need flames and combustion. A cooking oven won't do that.
People hunt whales for meat, oil, whalebone and ambergris, and for scientific research. Whale oil is used as a lubricant and as a component of soaps and cosmetics (and was formerly used for margarine and as fuel for lamps). Ambergris is used as a fixative in perfume production. Whale hunting is a way unwealthy people make money illegaly in places like Iceland, Japan, etc.
You could hook up Redstone lamps to daylight sensors.
Women did most of the cooking. If they were cooking meat then they would take the skin of the animal and hang it around the longhouse (they'll make the fur in to coats in winter ).
lamps
the act of turning animal fat into grease is called rendering the fat which is cooking it in a pan until it melts which then that liquid would be the grease
Sheep, cows and camels are some of the animals that make glycerine. It is a component of their fat and is also found in many other animal's fat. Glycerine is extracted from this fat commercially and is a component of most soaps and skin oil.
Industrial soaps are soaps used in mechanical shops to get off oil, grease, etc (such as lavasoap and fast orange)
Yes, there was a company with the name Van Cleef that made lamps in the 40's and 50's.