a dark oily liquid obtained by distillation of coal tar; used as a preservative for wood a colorless or yellowish oily liquid obtained by distillation of wood tar; used as an antiseptic treat with creosote; "creosoted wood
Creosote is a thick dark liquid made from coal tar which is used to prevent wood from rotting. a thick brown oily liquid used for preserving wood (kreosot, from kreas + soter ; because it was used as an antiseptic). Either of two entirely different substances, distilled from coal tar or wood tar. Coal-tar creosote is a complex mixture of organic compounds, largely hydrocarbons. It is a cheap water-insoluble wood preservative used for railroad ties, telephone poles, and marine pier pilings and as a disinfectant, fungicide, and biocide. Wood-tar creosote consists mainly of phenols and related compounds and was once widely used for pharmaceutical purposes
A potentially flammable oily byproduct of wood burning Often builds up in the chimney of wood burning fireplaces
A liquid coating made from coal tar once used as a wood preservative It has been banned for consumer use because of potential health risks
Used as a chemical for denaturing meat A colorless to yellowish oily liquid containing phenols and creosols, obtained by the destructive distillation of wood tar, especially from the wood of a beech, and formerly used as an expectorant in treating chronic bronchitis A yellowish to greenish-brown oily liquid containing phenols and creosols, obtained from coal tar and used as a wood preservative and disinfectant It can cause severe neurological disturbances if inhaled in strong concentrations
Any of several resinous aromatic evergreen shrubs of the genus Larrea, especially L. tridentata, a yellow-flowered plant characteristic of warm deserts in the southwest United States and Mexico