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ANALYST , in See also: modern times, a See also: person professionally skilled in chemical analysis
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He may be called upon, in the discharge of his profession, to analyse a wide range of substances
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Apart from private practitioners and those engaged in large manufacturing concerns, analysts employed by public bodies are termed public analysts
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In most large manufacturing establishments there is usually a staff of analysts, whose duty it is primarily to exercise See also: constant watchfulness over the processes of manufacture, to test the purity of the substances used, as well as that of the final products
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The services of analysts are constantly required in judicial enquiries, sometimes in purely criminal cases, some-times in See also: civil proceedings, such as offences against the customs or excise or under the various See also: British See also: Food and Drugs Acts
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In the See also: case of criminal proceedings, the services of the official analyst attached to the British Home Office are employed
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The inland revenue department has a laboratory at See also: Somerset See also: House, with a staff of analysts, who are engaged in analysing for excise and other purposes
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Under the Fertilizers and Feeding Stuffs See also: Act 1893, the See also: Board of See also: Agriculture employs an agricultural chemist, whose duty is the analysis of fertilizers and feeding stuffs
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A " public analyst " is an analyst appointed by a See also: local authority for the purposes of the Sale of Food and Drugs Acts
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He must be possessed of competent medical, chemical and microscopical knowledge to analyse all articles of food and drink (see ADULTERATION)
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