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  2. Adelaide Botanic Garden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Adelaide_Botanic_Garden

    The Adelaide Botanic Garden is a 51-hectare (130-acre) public garden at the north-east corner of the Adelaide city centre, in the Adelaide Park Lands.It encompasses a fenced garden on North Terrace (between Lot Fourteen, the site of the old Royal Adelaide Hospital, and the National Wine Centre) and behind it the Botanic Park (adjacent to the Adelaide Zoo).

  3. Fire brick - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fire_brick

    Fire brick. Refractory bricks in a torpedo car used for hauling molten iron. A fire brick, firebrick, fireclay brick, or refractory brick is a block of ceramic material used in lining furnaces, kilns, fireboxes, and fireplaces. A refractory brick is built primarily to withstand high temperature, but will also usually have a low thermal ...

  4. Clackline Refractory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clackline_Refractory

    Description. Clackline Refractory is located on Refractory Road, Clackline, Western Australia in a valley near Great Eastern Highway. As of 2012, the site is in poor condition and mostly deserted, apart from stacks of various ceramic products. As well as kilns suitable for modern day production, the site has older kilns constructed from bricks ...

  5. J. Hallett and Son - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J._Hallett_and_Son

    J. Hallett and Son, founded in 1904, was for most of the 20th century South Australia 's most important brickmaking firm. Founded by Job H. Hallett in 1889, his son Thomas Hallett became a partner in 1904. There were several sites across Adelaide 's western suburbs, with Halletts retaining their identity until the 1960s, when the company was ...

  6. Wittunga Botanic Garden - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wittunga_Botanic_Garden

    The Wittunga garden is located on Shepherds Hill Road, Blackwood, on the western scarp of the Adelaide Hills. Beginning as a formal English garden at the home of Edwin Ashby in 1901, it changed over the years assisted by the efforts of Edwin's son, Arthur Keith Ashby to include South African and native Australian plants.

  7. Refractory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Refractory

    Refractory. Refractory bricks in a torpedo car used for hauling molten iron. In materials science, a refractory (or refractory material) is a material that is resistant to decomposition by heat or chemical attack and that retains its strength and rigidity at high temperatures. [1] They are inorganic, non-metallic compounds that may be porous or ...