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  2. Pine oil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pine_oil

    Pine oil is used as a cleaning product, disinfectant, sanitizer, microbicide (or microbistat), virucide or insecticide. [5] It is an effective herbicide where its action is to modify the waxy cuticle of plants, resulting in desiccation. [8] Pine oil is a disinfectant that is mildly antiseptic. [9]

  3. Pine-Sol - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pine-Sol

    Pine-Sol is a registered trade name of the Clorox Company for a line of household cleaning products, used to clean grease and heavy soil stains. Pine-Sol was based on pine oil when it was created in 1929 and during its rise to national popularity in the 1950s. [3]

  4. Turpentine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Turpentine

    Turpentine may alternatively be extracted from destructive distillation of pine wood, [3] such as shredded pine stumps, roots, and slash, using the light end of the heavy naphtha fraction (boiling between 90 and 115 °C or 195 and 240 °F) from a crude oil refinery. Such turpentine is called wood turpentine.

  5. Pine nut oil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pine_nut_oil

    Pine nut oil, also called pine seed oil or cedar nut oil, is a vegetable oil, extracted from the edible seeds of several species of pine. While the oil produced from the seeds of more common European and American pine varieties is mostly used for culinary purposes, Siberian pines (growing in Russia, Mongolia and Kazakhstan), as well as Korean ...

  6. What Is a Pine Nut, Exactly? - AOL

    www.aol.com/pine-nut-exactly-220703388.html

    Pine cones take many months to grow the seeds that become pine nuts, and even then, the pine nuts aren’t ready to be harvested before the pine cones fully bloom.

  7. Tall oil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tall_oil

    Tall oil, also called liquid rosin or tallol, is a viscous yellow-black odorous liquid obtained as a by-product of the kraft process of wood pulp manufacture when pulping mainly coniferous trees. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] The name originated as an anglicization of the Swedish tallolja ('pine oil'). [ 3 ]