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Flax

Flax, also known as common flax or linseed, is a flowering plant, Linum usitatissimum, in the family Linaceae. It is cultivated as a food and fiber crop in regions of the world with temperate climates. Textiles made from flax are known in English as linen and are traditionally used for bed sheets, underclothes, and table linen. Its oil is known as linseed oil. In addition to referring to the plant, the word "flax" may refer to the unspun fibers of the flax plant. The plant species is known only as a cultivated plant[2] and appears to have been domesticated just once from the wild species Linum bienne, called pale flax.[3] The plants called "flax" in New Zealand are, by contrast, members of the genus Phormium.

Flax
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Plantae
Clade: Tracheophytes
Clade: Angiosperms
Clade: Eudicots
Clade: Rosids
Order: Malpighiales
Family: Linaceae
Genus: Linum
Species:
L. usitatissimum
Binomial name
Linum usitatissimum
Synonyms[1]
  • Linum crepitans (Boenn.) Dumort.
  • Linum humile Mill.
  • Linum indehiscens (Neilr.) Vavilov & Elladi

Description edit

 
Capsules
 
Flowers
 
Light-coloured flower

Several other species in the genus Linum are similar in appearance to L. usitatissimum, cultivated flax, including some that have similar blue flowers, and others with white, yellow, or red flowers.[4] Some of these are perennial plants, unlike L. usitatissimum, which is an annual plant.

Cultivated flax plants grow to 1.2 m (3 ft 11 in) tall, with slender stems. The leaves are glaucous green, slender lanceolate, 20–40 mm long, and 3 mm broad.[5]

The flowers are 15–25 mm in diameter with five petals, which can be colored white, blue, yellow, and red depending on the species.[5] The fruit is a round, dry capsule 5–9 mm in diameter, containing several glossy brown seeds shaped like apple pips, 4–7 mm long.

History edit

The earliest evidence of humans using wild flax as a textile comes from the present-day Republic of Georgia, where spun, dyed, and knotted wild flax fibers found in Dzudzuana Cave date to the Upper Paleolithic, 30,000 years ago.[6][7][8] Humans first domesticated flax in the Fertile Crescent region.[9] Evidence exists of a domesticated oilseed flax with increased seed-size from Tell Ramad in Syria[9] and flax fabric fragments from Çatalhöyük in Turkey[10] by c. 9,000 years ago. Use of the crop steadily spread, reaching as far as Switzerland and Germany by 5,000 years ago.[11] In China and India, domesticated flax was cultivated at least 5,000 years ago.[12]

Flax was cultivated extensively in ancient Egypt, where the temple walls had paintings of flowering flax, and mummies were embalmed using linen.[13] Egyptian priests wore only linen, as flax was considered a symbol of purity.[14] Phoenicians traded Egyptian linen throughout the Mediterranean and the Romans used it for their sails.[15] As the Roman Empire declined, so did flax production. But with laws designed to publicize the hygiene of linen textiles and the health of linseed oil, Charlemagne revived the crop in the eighth century CE.[16] Eventually, Flanders became the major center of the European linen industry in the Middle Ages.[16] In North America, colonists introduced flax, and it flourished there,[12] but by the early 20th century, cheap cotton and rising farm wages had caused production of flax to become concentrated in northern Russia, which came to provide 90% of the world's output. Since then, flax has lost its importance as a commercial crop, due to the easy availability of more durable fibres.[17]

Uses edit

 
Brown flax seeds
 
Golden flax seeds
 
Golden flax seed meal

Flax is grown for its seeds, which can be ground into a meal or turned into linseed oil, a product used as a nutritional supplement and as an ingredient in many wood-finishing products. Flax is also grown as an ornamental plant in gardens. Moreover, flax fibers are used to make linen. The specific epithet in its binomial name, usitatissimum, means "most useful".[18]

Flax fibers taken from the stem of the plant are two to three times as strong as cotton fibers. Additionally, flax fibers are naturally smooth and straight. Europe and North America both depended on flax for plant-based cloth until the 19th century, when cotton overtook flax as the most common plant for making rag-based paper. Flax is grown on the Canadian prairies for linseed oil, which is used as a drying oil in paints and varnishes and in products such as linoleum and printing inks.

Linseed meal, the by-product of producing linseed oil from flax seeds, is used as livestock fodder.[19]

Flax seeds edit

Flax seeds occur in brown and yellow (golden) varieties.[20] Most types of these basic varieties have similar nutritional characteristics and equal numbers of short-chain omega-3 fatty acids. Yellow flax seeds, called solin (trade name "Linola"),[21] have a similar oil profile to brown flax seeds and both are very high in omega-3s (alpha-linolenic acid (ALA), specifically).[22] Flax seeds produce a vegetable oil known as flax seed oil or linseed oil, which is one of the oldest commercial oils. It is an edible oil obtained by expeller pressing and sometimes followed by solvent extraction. Solvent-processed flax seed oil has been used for many centuries as a drying oil in painting and varnishing.[23]

Although brown flax seed varieties may be consumed as readily as the yellow ones, and have been for thousands of years, these varieties are more commonly used in paints, for fiber, and for cattle feed.

Culinary edit

 
Bread rolls being topped with flax seeds before baking

A 100-gram portion of ground flax seed supplies about 2,234 kilojoules (534 kilocalories) of food energy, 41 g of fat, 28 g of fiber, and 20 g of protein.[24] Whole flax seeds are chemically stable, but ground flax seed meal, because of oxidation, may go rancid when left exposed to air at room temperature in as little as a week.[25] Refrigeration and storage in sealed containers will keep ground flax seed meal for a longer period before it turns rancid. Under conditions similar to those found in commercial bakeries, trained sensory panelists could not detect differences between bread made with freshly ground flax seed and bread made with flax seed that had been milled four months earlier and stored at room temperature.[26] If packed immediately without exposure to air and light, milled flax seed is stable against excessive oxidation when stored for nine months at room temperature,[27] and under warehouse conditions, for 20 months at ambient temperatures.[citation needed]

Three phenolic glucosidessecoisolariciresinol diglucoside, p-coumaric acid glucoside, and ferulic acid glucoside—are present in commercial breads containing flax seed.[28]

Fodder edit

After crushing the seeds to extract linseed oil, the resultant linseed meal is a protein-rich feed for ruminants, rabbits, and fish.[19] It is also often used as feed for swine and poultry, and has also been used in horse concentrate and dog food.[29] The high omega-3 fatty acid (ALA) content of linseed meal "softens" milk, eggs, and meat, which means it causes a higher unsaturated fat content and thus lowers its storage time.[19] The high omega-3 content also has a further disadvantage, because this fatty acid oxidises and goes rancid quickly, which shortens the storage time. Linola was developed in Australia and introduced in the 1990s with less omega-3, specifically to serve as fodder.[21][30] Another disadvantage of the meal and seed is that it contains a vitamin B6 (pyridoxine) antagonist, and may require this vitamin be supplemented, especially in chickens, and furthermore linseeds contain 2–7% of mucilage (fibre), which may be beneficial in humans[19] and cattle,[29] but cannot be digested by non-ruminants and can be detrimental to young animals, unless possibly treated with enzymes.[19]

Linseed meal is added to cattle feed as a protein supplement. It can only be added at low percentages due to the high fat content, which is unhealthy for ruminants.[29] Compared to oilseed meal from crucifers it measures as having lower nutrient values,[19] however, good results are obtained in cattle, perhaps due to the mucilage, which may aid in slowing digestion and thus allowing more time to absorb nutrients.[19][29] One study found that feeding flax seeds may increase omega-3 content in beef, while another found no differences. It might also act as a substitute for tallow in increasing marbling.[29][31] In the US, flax-based feed for ruminants is often somewhat more expensive than other feeds on a nutrient basis.[32] Sheep feeding on low quality forage are able to eat a large amount of linseed meal, up to 40% in one test, with positive consequences. It has been fed as supplement to water buffaloes in India, and provided a better diet than forage alone, but not as good as when substituted with soy meal. It is considered an inferior protein supplement for swine because of its fibre, the vitamin antagonist, the high omega-3 content and its low lysine content, and can only be used in small amounts in the feed. Although it may increase the omega-3 content in eggs and meat, it is also an inferior and potentially toxic feed for poultry, although it can be used in small amounts. The meal is an adequate and traditional source of protein for rabbits at 8–10%. Its use in fish feeds is limited.[19]

Raw, immature linseeds contain an amount of cyanogenic compounds and can be dangerous for monogastric animals, like horses and rabbits. Boiling removes the danger. This is not an issue in meal cake due to the processing temperature during oil extraction.[19][32]

Flax straw left over from the harvesting of oilseed is not very nutritious; it is tough and indigestible, and is not recommended to use as ruminant fodder, although it may be used as bedding or baled as windbreaks.[32]

Flax fibers edit

 
An 18th century heckling shop once used to prepare flax fibers. North Ayrshire, Scotland.

Flax fiber is extracted from the bast beneath the surface of the stem of the flax plant. Flax fiber is soft, lustrous, and flexible; bundles of fiber have the appearance of blonde hair, hence the description "flaxen" hair. It is stronger than cotton fiber, but less elastic.

 
A flax field in bloom in North Dakota

The use of flax fibers dates back tens of millennia;[6] linen, a refined textile made from flax fibers, was worn widely by Sumerian priests more than 4,000 years ago.[33] Industrial-scale flax fiber processing existed in antiquity. A Bronze Age factory dedicated to flax processing was discovered in Euonymeia, Greece.[34]

The best grades are used for fabrics such as damasks, lace, and sheeting. Coarser grades are used for the manufacturing of twine and rope, and historically, for canvas and webbing equipment. Flax fiber is a raw material used in the high-quality paper industry for the use of printed banknotes, laboratory paper (blotting and filter), rolling paper for cigarettes, and tea bags.[35]

Flax mills for spinning flaxen yarn were invented by John Kendrew and Thomas Porthouse of Darlington, England, in 1787.[36] New methods of processing flax have led to renewed interest in the use of flax as an industrial fiber.

Nutrition edit

Flax seeds
Nutritional value per 100 g (3.5 oz)
Energy2,234 kJ (534 kcal)
28.88 g
Sugars1.55 g
Dietary fiber27.3 g
42.16 g
Saturated3.663 g
Monounsaturated7.527 g
Polyunsaturated28.730 g
22.8 g
5.9 g
18.29 g
VitaminsQuantity
%DV
Thiamine (B1)
143%
1.644 mg
Riboflavin (B2)
13%
0.161 mg
Niacin (B3)
21%
3.08 mg
Pantothenic acid (B5)
20%
0.985 mg
Vitamin B6
36%
0.473 mg
Folate (B9)
22%
87 μg
Vitamin C
1%
0.6 mg
MineralsQuantity
%DV
Calcium
26%
255 mg
Iron
44%
5.73 mg
Magnesium
110%
392 mg
Phosphorus
92%
642 mg
Potassium
27%
813 mg
Zinc
46%
4.34 mg
Other constituentsQuantity
Water7 g

Link to USDA Database entry
Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults.
Source: USDA FoodData Central

Flax seeds are 7% water, 18% protein, 29% carbohydrates, and 42% fat (table). In 100 grams (3.5 oz) as a reference amount, flax seeds provide 534 kilocalories and contain high levels (20% or more of the Daily Value, DV) of protein, dietary fiber, several B vitamins, and dietary minerals.[37][38] Flax seeds are especially rich in thiamine, magnesium, and phosphorus (DVs above 90%) (table).

As a percentage of total fat, flax seeds contain 54% omega-3 fatty acids (mostly ALA), 18% omega-9 fatty acids (oleic acid), and 6% omega-6 fatty acids (linoleic acid); the seeds contain 9% saturated fat, including 5% as palmitic acid.[37][38] Flax seed oil contains 53% 18:3 omega-3 fatty acids (mostly ALA) and 13% 18:2 omega-6 fatty acids.[37]

Health research edit

A meta-analysis showed that consumption of more than 30 g of flax-seed daily for more than 12 weeks reduced body weight, body mass index (BMI), and waist circumference for persons with a BMI greater than 27.[39] Another meta-analysis showed that consumption of flax seeds for more than 12 weeks produced small reductions in systolic blood pressure and diastolic blood pressure.[40] A third showed that consuming flax seed or its derivatives may reduce total and LDL-cholesterol in the blood, with greater benefits in women and people with high cholesterol.[41] A fourth showed a small reduction in c-reactive protein (a marker of inflammation) only in persons with a body mass index greater than 30.[42]

Linseed oil edit

 
Flax, flax seeds, linseed oil, linseed cake

Linseed oil, also known as flaxseed oil or flax oil (in its edible form), is a colourless to yellowish oil obtained from the dried, ripened seeds of the flax plant (Linum usitatissimum). The oil is obtained by pressing, sometimes followed by solvent extraction.

Owing to its polymer-forming properties, linseed oil is often blended with combinations of other oils, resins or solvents as an impregnator, drying oil finish or varnish in wood finishing, as a pigment binder in oil paints, as a plasticizer and hardener in putty, and in the manufacture of linoleum. Linseed oil use has declined over the past several decades with increased availability of synthetic alkyd resins—which function similarly but resist yellowing.[43]

Linseed oil is an edible oil in demand as a dietary supplement, as a source of α-Linolenic acid, an omega-3 fatty acid. In parts of Europe, it is traditionally eaten with potatoes and quark.

Safety edit

Flax seed and its oil are generally recognized as safe for human consumption.[44] Like many common foods, flax contains small amounts of cyanogenic glycoside,[45] which is nontoxic when consumed in typical amounts.[46] Typical concentrations (for example, 0.48% in a sample of defatted dehusked flax seed meal) can be removed by special processing.[47]

Cultivation edit

The soils most suitable for flax, besides the alluvial kind, are deep loams containing a large proportion of organic matter.[48] Flax is often found growing just above the waterline in cranberry bogs. Heavy clays are unsuitable, as are soils of a gravelly or dry sandy nature. Farming flax requires few fertilizers or pesticides. Within eight weeks of sowing, the plant can reach 10–15 cm (3.9–5.9 in) in height, reaching 70–80 cm (28–31 in) within 50 days.[citation needed]

Diseases edit

Production edit

In 2020, world production of flax (linseed) was 3.4 million tonnes, led by Kazakhstan with 31% of the total.[49] Other major producers were Russia, Canada, and China (table).

Flax (linseed) production – 2020
Country Production (tonnes)
  Kazakhstan 1,058,247
  Russia 787,923
  Canada 578,000
  China 330,000
World 3,367,331
Source: FAOSTAT of the United Nations[49]

Harvesting edit

Maturation edit

Flax is harvested for fiber production after about 100 days, or a month after the plants flower and two weeks after the seed capsules form. The bases of the plants begin to turn yellow. If the plants are still green, the seed will not be useful, and the fiber will be underdeveloped. The fiber degrades once the plants turn brown.

Flax grown for seed is allowed to mature until the seed capsules are yellow and just starting to split; it is then harvested in various ways. A combine harvester may either cut only the heads of the plants, or the whole plant. These are then dried to extract the seed. The amount of weeds in the straw affects its marketability, and this, coupled with market prices, determines whether the farmer chooses to harvest the flax straw. If the flax straw is not harvested, typically, it is burned, since the stalks are quite tough and decompose slowly (i.e., not in a single season). Formed into windrows from the harvesting process, the straw often clogs up tillage and planting equipment. Flax straw that is not of sufficient quality for fiber uses can be baled to build shelters for farm animals, or sold as biofuel, or removed from the field in the spring.[50]

Two ways are used to harvest flax fiber, one involving mechanized equipment (combines), and a second method, more manual and targeting maximum fiber length.

Harvesting for fiber edit

Mechanical edit

Flax for fiber production is usually harvested by a specialized flax harvester. Usually built on the same machine base as a combine, but instead of the cutting head it has a flax puller. The flax plant is turned over and is gripped by rubber belts roughly 20–25 cm (8–10 inches) above ground, to avoid getting grasses and weeds in the flax. The rubber belts then pull the whole plant out of the ground with the roots so the whole length of the plant fiber can be used. The plants then pass over the machine and is placed on the field crosswise to the harvester's direction of travel. The plants are left in the field for field retting.

The mature plant can also be cut with mowing equipment, similar to hay harvesting, and raked into windrows. When dried sufficiently, a combine then harvests the seeds similar to wheat or oat harvesting.

Manual edit

The plant is pulled up with the roots (not cut), so as to increase the fiber length. After this, the flax is allowed to dry, the seeds are removed, and it is then retted. Dependent upon climatic conditions, characteristics of the sown flax and fields, the flax remains on the ground between two weeks and two months for retting. As a result of alternating rain and the sun, an enzymatic action degrades the pectins which bind fibers to the straw. The farmers turn over the straw during retting to evenly rett the stalks. When the straw is retted and sufficiently dry, it is rolled up. It is then stored by farmers before extracting the fibers.

 
De vlasoogst (1904) ("The flax harvest") painting by Emile Claus, Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium, Brussels, Belgium

Processing edit

 
A hackle or heckle, a tool for threshing flax and preparing the fiber
 
Flax tissues, Tacuinum sanitatis, 14th century

Threshing is the process of removing the seeds from the rest of the plant. Separating the usable flax fibers from other components requires pulling the stems through a hackle and/or beating the plants to break them.

Flax processing is divided into two parts: the first part is generally done by the farmer, to bring the flax fiber into a fit state for general or common purposes. This can be performed by three machines: one for threshing out the seed, one for breaking and separating the straw (stem) from the fiber, and one for further separating the broken straw and matter from the fiber.

The second part of the process brings the flax into a state for the very finest purposes, such as lace, cambric, damask, and very fine linen. This second part is performed by a refining machine.

Preparation for spinning edit

 
Stem cross-section, showing locations of underlying tissues: Ep = epidermis; C = cortex; BF = bast fibers; P = phloem; X = xylem; Pi = pith
Threshing, retting, and dressing flax at the Roscheider Hof Open Air Museum (Germany)

Before the flax fibers can be spun into linen, they must be separated from the rest of the stalk. The first step in this process is retting, which is the process of rotting away the inner stalk, leaving the outer parts intact. At this point, straw, or coarse outer stem (cortex and epidermis), is still remaining. To remove this, the flax is "broken", the straw is broken up into small, short bits, while the actual fiber is left unharmed. Scutching scrapes the outer straw from the fiber. The stems are then pulled through "hackles", which act like combs to remove the straw and some shorter fibers out of the long fiber.[citation needed]

Retting flax edit

Several methods are used for retting flax. It can be retted in a pond, stream, field, or tank. When the retting is complete, the bundles of flax feel soft and slimy, and quite a few fibers are standing out from the stalks. When wrapped around a finger, the inner woody part springs away from the fibers. Pond retting is the fastest. It consists of placing the flax in a pool of water which will not evaporate. It generally takes place in a shallow pool which will warm up dramatically in the sun; the process may take from a few days to a few weeks. Pond-retted flax is traditionally considered of lower quality, possibly because the product can become dirty, and is easily over-retted, damaging the fiber. This form of retting also produces quite an odor. Stream retting is similar to pool retting, but the flax is submerged in bundles in a stream or river. This generally takes two or three weeks longer than pond retting, but the end product is less likely to be dirty, does not smell as bad, and because the water is cooler, is less likely to be over-retted. Both pond and stream retting were traditionally used less because they pollute the waters used for the process.[citation needed]

In field retting, the flax is laid out in a large field, and dew is allowed to collect on it. This process normally takes a month or more, but is generally considered to provide the highest quality flax fibers, and it produces the least pollution.[51]

Retting can also be done in a plastic trash can or any type of water-tight container of wood, concrete, earthenware, or plastic. Metal containers will not work, as an acid is produced when retting, and it would corrode the metal. If the water temperature is kept at 80 °F (27 °C), the retting process under these conditions takes 4 or 5 days. If the water is any colder, it takes longer. Scum collects at the top, and an odor is given off the same as in pond retting. 'Enzymatic' retting of flax has been researched as a technique to engineer fibers with specific properties.[52][53]

Dressing the flax edit

Dressing the flax is the process of removing the straw from the fibers. Dressing consists of three steps: breaking, scutching, and heckling. The breaking breaks up the straw. Some of the straw is scraped from the fibers in the scutching process, and finally, the fiber is pulled through heckles to remove the last bits of straw.

Breaking breaks up the straw into short segments.

Scutching removes some of the straw from the fiber.

Heckling is pulling the fiber through various sizes of heckling combs or heckles. A heckle is a bed of "nails"—sharp, long-tapered, tempered, polished steel pins driven into wooden blocks at regular spacing.

Genetically modified flax contamination edit

 
Small flax plants

In September 2009, Canadian flax exports reportedly had been contaminated by a deregistered genetically modified cultivar called 'Triffid' that had food and feed safety approval in Canada and the U.S.[54][55] Canadian growers and the Flax Council of Canada raised concerns about the marketability of this cultivar in Europe where a zero tolerance policy exists regarding unapproved genetically modified organisms.[56] Consequently, Triffid was deregistered in 2010 and never grown commercially in Canada or the U.S.[57] Triffid stores were destroyed, but future exports and further tests at the University of Saskatchewan proved that Triffid persisted in at least two Canadian flax varieties, possibly affecting future crops.[57] Canadian flax seed cultivars were reconstituted with Triffid-free seed used to plant the 2014 crop.[54] Laboratories are certified to test for the presence of Triffid at a level of one seed in 10,000.[55]

Symbolic images edit

 
Four flax flowers pictured in the coat of arms of Mulgi Parish

Flax is an emblem of Northern Ireland and displayed by the Northern Ireland Assembly. In a coronet, it appeared on the reverse of the British one-pound coin to represent Northern Ireland on coins minted in 1986, 1991, and 2014. Flax also represents Northern Ireland on the badge of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom and on various logos associated with it.

Common flax is the national flower of Belarus.

In early versions of the Sleeping Beauty tale, such as "Sun, Moon, and Talia" by Giambattista Basile, the princess pricks her finger, not on a spindle, but on a sliver of flax, which later is sucked out by her children conceived as she sleeps.

See also edit

References edit

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External links edit

  •   The dictionary definition of flaxen at Wiktionary

flax, other, uses, disambiguation, also, known, common, flax, linseed, flowering, plant, linum, usitatissimum, family, linaceae, cultivated, food, fiber, crop, regions, world, with, temperate, climates, textiles, made, from, flax, known, english, linen, tradit. For other uses see Flax disambiguation Flax also known as common flax or linseed is a flowering plant Linum usitatissimum in the family Linaceae It is cultivated as a food and fiber crop in regions of the world with temperate climates Textiles made from flax are known in English as linen and are traditionally used for bed sheets underclothes and table linen Its oil is known as linseed oil In addition to referring to the plant the word flax may refer to the unspun fibers of the flax plant The plant species is known only as a cultivated plant 2 and appears to have been domesticated just once from the wild species Linum bienne called pale flax 3 The plants called flax in New Zealand are by contrast members of the genus Phormium FlaxScientific classificationKingdom PlantaeClade TracheophytesClade AngiospermsClade EudicotsClade RosidsOrder MalpighialesFamily LinaceaeGenus LinumSpecies L usitatissimumBinomial nameLinum usitatissimumL Synonyms 1 Linum crepitans Boenn Dumort Linum humile Mill Linum indehiscens Neilr Vavilov amp Elladi Contents 1 Description 2 History 3 Uses 3 1 Flax seeds 3 1 1 Culinary 3 1 2 Fodder 3 2 Flax fibers 4 Nutrition 4 1 Health research 4 2 Linseed oil 4 3 Safety 5 Cultivation 5 1 Diseases 6 Production 7 Harvesting 7 1 Maturation 7 2 Harvesting for fiber 7 2 1 Mechanical 7 2 2 Manual 8 Processing 9 Preparation for spinning 9 1 Retting flax 9 2 Dressing the flax 10 Genetically modified flax contamination 11 Symbolic images 12 See also 13 References 14 External linksDescription edit nbsp Capsules nbsp Flowers nbsp Light coloured flowerSeveral other species in the genus Linum are similar in appearance to L usitatissimum cultivated flax including some that have similar blue flowers and others with white yellow or red flowers 4 Some of these are perennial plants unlike L usitatissimum which is an annual plant Cultivated flax plants grow to 1 2 m 3 ft 11 in tall with slender stems The leaves are glaucous green slender lanceolate 20 40 mm long and 3 mm broad 5 The flowers are 15 25 mm in diameter with five petals which can be colored white blue yellow and red depending on the species 5 The fruit is a round dry capsule 5 9 mm in diameter containing several glossy brown seeds shaped like apple pips 4 7 mm long History editThe earliest evidence of humans using wild flax as a textile comes from the present day Republic of Georgia where spun dyed and knotted wild flax fibers found in Dzudzuana Cave date to the Upper Paleolithic 30 000 years ago 6 7 8 Humans first domesticated flax in the Fertile Crescent region 9 Evidence exists of a domesticated oilseed flax with increased seed size from Tell Ramad in Syria 9 and flax fabric fragments from Catalhoyuk in Turkey 10 by c 9 000 years ago Use of the crop steadily spread reaching as far as Switzerland and Germany by 5 000 years ago 11 In China and India domesticated flax was cultivated at least 5 000 years ago 12 Flax was cultivated extensively in ancient Egypt where the temple walls had paintings of flowering flax and mummies were embalmed using linen 13 Egyptian priests wore only linen as flax was considered a symbol of purity 14 Phoenicians traded Egyptian linen throughout the Mediterranean and the Romans used it for their sails 15 As the Roman Empire declined so did flax production But with laws designed to publicize the hygiene of linen textiles and the health of linseed oil Charlemagne revived the crop in the eighth century CE 16 Eventually Flanders became the major center of the European linen industry in the Middle Ages 16 In North America colonists introduced flax and it flourished there 12 but by the early 20th century cheap cotton and rising farm wages had caused production of flax to become concentrated in northern Russia which came to provide 90 of the world s output Since then flax has lost its importance as a commercial crop due to the easy availability of more durable fibres 17 Uses edit nbsp Brown flax seeds nbsp Golden flax seeds nbsp Golden flax seed mealFlax is grown for its seeds which can be ground into a meal or turned into linseed oil a product used as a nutritional supplement and as an ingredient in many wood finishing products Flax is also grown as an ornamental plant in gardens Moreover flax fibers are used to make linen The specific epithet in its binomial name usitatissimum means most useful 18 Flax fibers taken from the stem of the plant are two to three times as strong as cotton fibers Additionally flax fibers are naturally smooth and straight Europe and North America both depended on flax for plant based cloth until the 19th century when cotton overtook flax as the most common plant for making rag based paper Flax is grown on the Canadian prairies for linseed oil which is used as a drying oil in paints and varnishes and in products such as linoleum and printing inks Linseed meal the by product of producing linseed oil from flax seeds is used as livestock fodder 19 Flax seeds edit Flax seeds occur in brown and yellow golden varieties 20 Most types of these basic varieties have similar nutritional characteristics and equal numbers of short chain omega 3 fatty acids Yellow flax seeds called solin trade name Linola 21 have a similar oil profile to brown flax seeds and both are very high in omega 3s alpha linolenic acid ALA specifically 22 Flax seeds produce a vegetable oil known as flax seed oil or linseed oil which is one of the oldest commercial oils It is an edible oil obtained by expeller pressing and sometimes followed by solvent extraction Solvent processed flax seed oil has been used for many centuries as a drying oil in painting and varnishing 23 Although brown flax seed varieties may be consumed as readily as the yellow ones and have been for thousands of years these varieties are more commonly used in paints for fiber and for cattle feed Culinary edit nbsp Bread rolls being topped with flax seeds before bakingA 100 gram portion of ground flax seed supplies about 2 234 kilojoules 534 kilocalories of food energy 41 g of fat 28 g of fiber and 20 g of protein 24 Whole flax seeds are chemically stable but ground flax seed meal because of oxidation may go rancid when left exposed to air at room temperature in as little as a week 25 Refrigeration and storage in sealed containers will keep ground flax seed meal for a longer period before it turns rancid Under conditions similar to those found in commercial bakeries trained sensory panelists could not detect differences between bread made with freshly ground flax seed and bread made with flax seed that had been milled four months earlier and stored at room temperature 26 If packed immediately without exposure to air and light milled flax seed is stable against excessive oxidation when stored for nine months at room temperature 27 and under warehouse conditions for 20 months at ambient temperatures citation needed Three phenolic glucosides secoisolariciresinol diglucoside p coumaric acid glucoside and ferulic acid glucoside are present in commercial breads containing flax seed 28 Fodder edit After crushing the seeds to extract linseed oil the resultant linseed meal is a protein rich feed for ruminants rabbits and fish 19 It is also often used as feed for swine and poultry and has also been used in horse concentrate and dog food 29 The high omega 3 fatty acid ALA content of linseed meal softens milk eggs and meat which means it causes a higher unsaturated fat content and thus lowers its storage time 19 The high omega 3 content also has a further disadvantage because this fatty acid oxidises and goes rancid quickly which shortens the storage time Linola was developed in Australia and introduced in the 1990s with less omega 3 specifically to serve as fodder 21 30 Another disadvantage of the meal and seed is that it contains a vitamin B6 pyridoxine antagonist and may require this vitamin be supplemented especially in chickens and furthermore linseeds contain 2 7 of mucilage fibre which may be beneficial in humans 19 and cattle 29 but cannot be digested by non ruminants and can be detrimental to young animals unless possibly treated with enzymes 19 Linseed meal is added to cattle feed as a protein supplement It can only be added at low percentages due to the high fat content which is unhealthy for ruminants 29 Compared to oilseed meal from crucifers it measures as having lower nutrient values 19 however good results are obtained in cattle perhaps due to the mucilage which may aid in slowing digestion and thus allowing more time to absorb nutrients 19 29 One study found that feeding flax seeds may increase omega 3 content in beef while another found no differences It might also act as a substitute for tallow in increasing marbling 29 31 In the US flax based feed for ruminants is often somewhat more expensive than other feeds on a nutrient basis 32 Sheep feeding on low quality forage are able to eat a large amount of linseed meal up to 40 in one test with positive consequences It has been fed as supplement to water buffaloes in India and provided a better diet than forage alone but not as good as when substituted with soy meal It is considered an inferior protein supplement for swine because of its fibre the vitamin antagonist the high omega 3 content and its low lysine content and can only be used in small amounts in the feed Although it may increase the omega 3 content in eggs and meat it is also an inferior and potentially toxic feed for poultry although it can be used in small amounts The meal is an adequate and traditional source of protein for rabbits at 8 10 Its use in fish feeds is limited 19 Raw immature linseeds contain an amount of cyanogenic compounds and can be dangerous for monogastric animals like horses and rabbits Boiling removes the danger This is not an issue in meal cake due to the processing temperature during oil extraction 19 32 Flax straw left over from the harvesting of oilseed is not very nutritious it is tough and indigestible and is not recommended to use as ruminant fodder although it may be used as bedding or baled as windbreaks 32 Flax fibers edit nbsp An 18th century heckling shop once used to prepare flax fibers North Ayrshire Scotland Flax fiber is extracted from the bast beneath the surface of the stem of the flax plant Flax fiber is soft lustrous and flexible bundles of fiber have the appearance of blonde hair hence the description flaxen hair It is stronger than cotton fiber but less elastic nbsp A flax field in bloom in North DakotaThe use of flax fibers dates back tens of millennia 6 linen a refined textile made from flax fibers was worn widely by Sumerian priests more than 4 000 years ago 33 Industrial scale flax fiber processing existed in antiquity A Bronze Age factory dedicated to flax processing was discovered in Euonymeia Greece 34 The best grades are used for fabrics such as damasks lace and sheeting Coarser grades are used for the manufacturing of twine and rope and historically for canvas and webbing equipment Flax fiber is a raw material used in the high quality paper industry for the use of printed banknotes laboratory paper blotting and filter rolling paper for cigarettes and tea bags 35 Flax mills for spinning flaxen yarn were invented by John Kendrew and Thomas Porthouse of Darlington England in 1787 36 New methods of processing flax have led to renewed interest in the use of flax as an industrial fiber Nutrition editFlax seedsNutritional value per 100 g 3 5 oz Energy2 234 kJ 534 kcal Carbohydrates28 88 gSugars1 55 gDietary fiber27 3 gFat42 16 gSaturated3 663 gMonounsaturated7 527 gPolyunsaturatedomega 3omega 628 730 g22 8 g5 9 gProtein18 29 gVitaminsQuantity DV Thiamine B1 143 1 644 mgRiboflavin B2 13 0 161 mgNiacin B3 21 3 08 mgPantothenic acid B5 20 0 985 mgVitamin B636 0 473 mgFolate B9 22 87 mgVitamin C1 0 6 mgMineralsQuantity DV Calcium26 255 mgIron44 5 73 mgMagnesium110 392 mgPhosphorus92 642 mgPotassium27 813 mgZinc46 4 34 mgOther constituentsQuantityWater7 gLink to USDA Database entryUnits mg micrograms mg milligrams IU International units Percentages are roughly approximated using US recommendations for adults Source USDA FoodData CentralFlax seeds are 7 water 18 protein 29 carbohydrates and 42 fat table In 100 grams 3 5 oz as a reference amount flax seeds provide 534 kilocalories and contain high levels 20 or more of the Daily Value DV of protein dietary fiber several B vitamins and dietary minerals 37 38 Flax seeds are especially rich in thiamine magnesium and phosphorus DVs above 90 table As a percentage of total fat flax seeds contain 54 omega 3 fatty acids mostly ALA 18 omega 9 fatty acids oleic acid and 6 omega 6 fatty acids linoleic acid the seeds contain 9 saturated fat including 5 as palmitic acid 37 38 Flax seed oil contains 53 18 3 omega 3 fatty acids mostly ALA and 13 18 2 omega 6 fatty acids 37 Health research edit A meta analysis showed that consumption of more than 30 g of flax seed daily for more than 12 weeks reduced body weight body mass index BMI and waist circumference for persons with a BMI greater than 27 39 Another meta analysis showed that consumption of flax seeds for more than 12 weeks produced small reductions in systolic blood pressure and diastolic blood pressure 40 A third showed that consuming flax seed or its derivatives may reduce total and LDL cholesterol in the blood with greater benefits in women and people with high cholesterol 41 A fourth showed a small reduction in c reactive protein a marker of inflammation only in persons with a body mass index greater than 30 42 Linseed oil edit This section is an excerpt from Linseed oil edit nbsp Flax flax seeds linseed oil linseed cakeLinseed oil also known as flaxseed oil or flax oil in its edible form is a colourless to yellowish oil obtained from the dried ripened seeds of the flax plant Linum usitatissimum The oil is obtained by pressing sometimes followed by solvent extraction Owing to its polymer forming properties linseed oil is often blended with combinations of other oils resins or solvents as an impregnator drying oil finish or varnish in wood finishing as a pigment binder in oil paints as a plasticizer and hardener in putty and in the manufacture of linoleum Linseed oil use has declined over the past several decades with increased availability of synthetic alkyd resins which function similarly but resist yellowing 43 Linseed oil is an edible oil in demand as a dietary supplement as a source of a Linolenic acid an omega 3 fatty acid In parts of Europe it is traditionally eaten with potatoes and quark Safety edit Flax seed and its oil are generally recognized as safe for human consumption 44 Like many common foods flax contains small amounts of cyanogenic glycoside 45 which is nontoxic when consumed in typical amounts 46 Typical concentrations for example 0 48 in a sample of defatted dehusked flax seed meal can be removed by special processing 47 Cultivation editThe soils most suitable for flax besides the alluvial kind are deep loams containing a large proportion of organic matter 48 Flax is often found growing just above the waterline in cranberry bogs Heavy clays are unsuitable as are soils of a gravelly or dry sandy nature Farming flax requires few fertilizers or pesticides Within eight weeks of sowing the plant can reach 10 15 cm 3 9 5 9 in in height reaching 70 80 cm 28 31 in within 50 days citation needed Diseases edit Main article List of flax diseasesProduction editIn 2020 world production of flax linseed was 3 4 million tonnes led by Kazakhstan with 31 of the total 49 Other major producers were Russia Canada and China table Flax linseed production 2020Country Production tonnes nbsp Kazakhstan 1 058 247 nbsp Russia 787 923 nbsp Canada 578 000 nbsp China 330 000World 3 367 331Source FAOSTAT of the United Nations 49 Harvesting editThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message Maturation edit Flax is harvested for fiber production after about 100 days or a month after the plants flower and two weeks after the seed capsules form The bases of the plants begin to turn yellow If the plants are still green the seed will not be useful and the fiber will be underdeveloped The fiber degrades once the plants turn brown Flax grown for seed is allowed to mature until the seed capsules are yellow and just starting to split it is then harvested in various ways A combine harvester may either cut only the heads of the plants or the whole plant These are then dried to extract the seed The amount of weeds in the straw affects its marketability and this coupled with market prices determines whether the farmer chooses to harvest the flax straw If the flax straw is not harvested typically it is burned since the stalks are quite tough and decompose slowly i e not in a single season Formed into windrows from the harvesting process the straw often clogs up tillage and planting equipment Flax straw that is not of sufficient quality for fiber uses can be baled to build shelters for farm animals or sold as biofuel or removed from the field in the spring 50 Two ways are used to harvest flax fiber one involving mechanized equipment combines and a second method more manual and targeting maximum fiber length Harvesting for fiber edit Mechanical edit Flax for fiber production is usually harvested by a specialized flax harvester Usually built on the same machine base as a combine but instead of the cutting head it has a flax puller The flax plant is turned over and is gripped by rubber belts roughly 20 25 cm 8 10 inches above ground to avoid getting grasses and weeds in the flax The rubber belts then pull the whole plant out of the ground with the roots so the whole length of the plant fiber can be used The plants then pass over the machine and is placed on the field crosswise to the harvester s direction of travel The plants are left in the field for field retting The mature plant can also be cut with mowing equipment similar to hay harvesting and raked into windrows When dried sufficiently a combine then harvests the seeds similar to wheat or oat harvesting Manual edit The plant is pulled up with the roots not cut so as to increase the fiber length After this the flax is allowed to dry the seeds are removed and it is then retted Dependent upon climatic conditions characteristics of the sown flax and fields the flax remains on the ground between two weeks and two months for retting As a result of alternating rain and the sun an enzymatic action degrades the pectins which bind fibers to the straw The farmers turn over the straw during retting to evenly rett the stalks When the straw is retted and sufficiently dry it is rolled up It is then stored by farmers before extracting the fibers nbsp De vlasoogst 1904 The flax harvest painting by Emile Claus Royal Museums of Fine Arts of Belgium Brussels BelgiumProcessing editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp A hackle or heckle a tool for threshing flax and preparing the fiber nbsp Flax tissues Tacuinum sanitatis 14th centuryThreshing is the process of removing the seeds from the rest of the plant Separating the usable flax fibers from other components requires pulling the stems through a hackle and or beating the plants to break them Flax processing is divided into two parts the first part is generally done by the farmer to bring the flax fiber into a fit state for general or common purposes This can be performed by three machines one for threshing out the seed one for breaking and separating the straw stem from the fiber and one for further separating the broken straw and matter from the fiber The second part of the process brings the flax into a state for the very finest purposes such as lace cambric damask and very fine linen This second part is performed by a refining machine Preparation for spinning edit nbsp Stem cross section showing locations of underlying tissues Ep epidermis C cortex BF bast fibers P phloem X xylem Pi pith source source source source Threshing retting and dressing flax at the Roscheider Hof Open Air Museum Germany Before the flax fibers can be spun into linen they must be separated from the rest of the stalk The first step in this process is retting which is the process of rotting away the inner stalk leaving the outer parts intact At this point straw or coarse outer stem cortex and epidermis is still remaining To remove this the flax is broken the straw is broken up into small short bits while the actual fiber is left unharmed Scutching scrapes the outer straw from the fiber The stems are then pulled through hackles which act like combs to remove the straw and some shorter fibers out of the long fiber citation needed Retting flax edit Several methods are used for retting flax It can be retted in a pond stream field or tank When the retting is complete the bundles of flax feel soft and slimy and quite a few fibers are standing out from the stalks When wrapped around a finger the inner woody part springs away from the fibers Pond retting is the fastest It consists of placing the flax in a pool of water which will not evaporate It generally takes place in a shallow pool which will warm up dramatically in the sun the process may take from a few days to a few weeks Pond retted flax is traditionally considered of lower quality possibly because the product can become dirty and is easily over retted damaging the fiber This form of retting also produces quite an odor Stream retting is similar to pool retting but the flax is submerged in bundles in a stream or river This generally takes two or three weeks longer than pond retting but the end product is less likely to be dirty does not smell as bad and because the water is cooler is less likely to be over retted Both pond and stream retting were traditionally used less because they pollute the waters used for the process citation needed In field retting the flax is laid out in a large field and dew is allowed to collect on it This process normally takes a month or more but is generally considered to provide the highest quality flax fibers and it produces the least pollution 51 Retting can also be done in a plastic trash can or any type of water tight container of wood concrete earthenware or plastic Metal containers will not work as an acid is produced when retting and it would corrode the metal If the water temperature is kept at 80 F 27 C the retting process under these conditions takes 4 or 5 days If the water is any colder it takes longer Scum collects at the top and an odor is given off the same as in pond retting Enzymatic retting of flax has been researched as a technique to engineer fibers with specific properties 52 53 Dressing the flax edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Breaking flax nbsp Scutching flax nbsp Heckling flax nbsp Flax fiber in different forms before and after processingDressing the flax is the process of removing the straw from the fibers Dressing consists of three steps breaking scutching and heckling The breaking breaks up the straw Some of the straw is scraped from the fibers in the scutching process and finally the fiber is pulled through heckles to remove the last bits of straw Breaking breaks up the straw into short segments Scutching removes some of the straw from the fiber Heckling is pulling the fiber through various sizes of heckling combs or heckles A heckle is a bed of nails sharp long tapered tempered polished steel pins driven into wooden blocks at regular spacing Genetically modified flax contamination edit nbsp Small flax plantsIn September 2009 Canadian flax exports reportedly had been contaminated by a deregistered genetically modified cultivar called Triffid that had food and feed safety approval in Canada and the U S 54 55 Canadian growers and the Flax Council of Canada raised concerns about the marketability of this cultivar in Europe where a zero tolerance policy exists regarding unapproved genetically modified organisms 56 Consequently Triffid was deregistered in 2010 and never grown commercially in Canada or the U S 57 Triffid stores were destroyed but future exports and further tests at the University of Saskatchewan proved that Triffid persisted in at least two Canadian flax varieties possibly affecting future crops 57 Canadian flax seed cultivars were reconstituted with Triffid free seed used to plant the 2014 crop 54 Laboratories are certified to test for the presence of Triffid at a level of one seed in 10 000 55 Symbolic images editThis section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed June 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message nbsp Four flax flowers pictured in the coat of arms of Mulgi ParishFlax is an emblem of Northern Ireland and displayed by the Northern Ireland Assembly In a coronet it appeared on the reverse of the British one pound coin to represent Northern Ireland on coins minted in 1986 1991 and 2014 Flax also represents Northern Ireland on the badge of the Supreme Court of the United Kingdom and on various logos associated with it Common flax is the national flower of Belarus In early versions of the Sleeping Beauty tale such as Sun Moon and Talia by Giambattista Basile the princess pricks her finger not on a spindle but on a sliver of flax which later is sucked out by her children conceived as she sleeps See also editFlax in New Zealand Flax fibre Phormium in New Zealand International Year of Natural Fibres United Nations observance of 2009 Irish linen brand name for linen woven in IrelandPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Belgian Linen TrademarkPages displaying short descriptions with no spaces Nutrition Provision to cells and organisms to support life Salvia hispanica Species of flowering plant in the mint and sage family Lamiaceae Thomas Ferguson amp Co Ltd Irish linen Jacquard weaver in IrelandPages displaying wikidata descriptions as a fallback Shatnez Type of cloth Hemp seed Low THC cannabis plantPages displaying short descriptions of redirect targetsReferences edit Linum usitatissimum L The Plant List A Working List of All Plant Species Linum usitatissimum Germplasm Resources Information Network Agricultural Research Service United States Department of Agriculture Retrieved 2 October 2014 Allaby R Peterson G Merriwether D Fu Y B 2005 Evidence of the domestication history of flax Linum usitatissimum L from genetic diversity of the sad2 locus Theoretical and Applied Genetics 112 1 58 65 doi 10 1007 s00122 005 0103 3 PMID 16215731 S2CID 6342499 Quanru Liu Lihua Zhou Linum Flora of China Vol 11 Archived from the original on 5 April 2015 Retrieved 2 October 2014 a b Saleem Muhammad Hamzah Ali Shafaqat Hussain Saddam Kamran Muhammad Chattha Muhammad Sohaib Ahmad Shoaib Aqeel Muhammad Rizwan Muhammad Aljarba Nada H Alkahtani Saad Abdel Daim Mohamed M April 2020 Flax Linum usitatissimum L A Potential Candidate for Phytoremediation Biological and Economical Points of View Plants 9 4 496 doi 10 3390 plants9040496 ISSN 2223 7747 PMC 7238412 PMID 32294947 a b These Vintage Threads Are 30 000 Years Old NPR org NPR Archived from the original on 4 December 2010 Retrieved 13 November 2010 Balter M 2009 Clothes make the Hu Man Science 325 5946 1329 doi 10 1126 science 325 1329a PMID 19745126 Kvavadze E Bar Yosef O Belfer Cohen A Boaretto E Jakeli N Matskevich Z 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