Close
Home
Help
Library
Login
FAO Staff Login
Register
0
Selected
Invert selection
Deselect all
Deselect all
Click here to refresh results
Click here to refresh results
Digital Asset Management (DAM) by Orange Logic
Go to Login page
Hide details
Explore More Collections
Conceptually similar
LIBYA 1953. Introducing method of curing that yields a product of much higher quality
LIBYA 1953. Introducing method of curing that yields a product of much higher quality
LIBYA 1953. Introducing method of curing that yields a product of much higher quality
LIBYA 1953. Introducing method of curing that yields a product of much higher quality
LIBYA 1953. FAO date expert examines species of insect pests
LIBYA 1953. FAO photographer preparing to shoot an olive plantation
LYBIA 1953. Dune fixation using 'Saccharum aegyptiacum'
LIBYA 1973. Agricultural Development and Land Use
INDIA 1953. FAO seminar
THAILAND 1953. Tilapia fingerlings in net
THAILAND 1953. Nutritional Survey team examines children
THAILAND 1953. Showcasing Tilapia fish characteristics at Bangkhen Experiment station
ZAMBIA 1965. Fisheries development
KENYA 1967. UNDP FAO Assistance to the Range Management Division of the Kenya Ministry of Agriculture and Animal Husbandry
INDONESIA 1951. Project to irrigate 6,000 hectares
SUDAN 1962. FAO support to mother-of-pearl industry
TUNISIA 1970. Experiments and Demonstration on the Production of Selected Tree Crops, Forage and Livestock
INDONESIA 1955. Examining carp harvest at a private farm
CHAD 1981. WFP feeding of vulnerable groups and assistance to drought rehabilitation
CEYLON 1953 (SRI LANKA from 1972). Live-bait bonito fishermen standing on an outrigger canoe
Similar tones
View images with similar tones
Add to collection
LIBYA 1953. Introducing method of curing that yields a product of much higher quality
1953 (exact date unknown). Tripoli, Libya. The owner of a curing yard examining a skin cured according to the new method. In contrast to those cured by the former method, these have no smell and the hair remains firmly attached.
01/01/1953
Credit
FAO
UNFAO Source
FAO Photo Library
File size
448.90 KB
Unique ID
UF12GMH
Editorial use only. Photo credit must be given. For further information contact: Photo-Library@fao.org
Background Information
Following the declaration of independence of Libya, the Food and Agriculture Organization of the United Nations (FAO) sent to that country a large mission of experts in agriculture, forestry, agricultural statistics and marketing.
Cured hides and skins count among Libya's most important export items, but in the last century poor flaying and curing and delay in curing have hampered and increases in that trade. The FAO expert, Mr. R.F. Innes, of the United Kingdom, soon found that flaying scars and cuts plus holes due to putrefaction were the main factors devaluating Libyan skins. He therefore drafted, with the help of the Libyan authorities, a law on flaying and introduced a new method of curing that yields a product of much higher quality. Having recently finished a second year in Libya, Mr. Innes observes that over 90 per cent of the skins are correctly flayed and that progress is steadily, if slowly, being made in curing methods. Already some European and American markets are paying higher prices for Libyan skins cured according to the method he introduced.