chemical element with atomic number 38
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Is higher cholesterol better for the brain?Would taking strontium for spine osteoporosis be of benefit?I have chronic regional pain syndrome. Any suggestions for treatment?A grateful pet owner's comment on Dr. Hoffman's recent podcast with a holistic veterinarian
Taxpayers dollars went to doxxing opponents of pesticides, GMOs; Strontium for fracture healing? Vitamin D helps thyroid; Study highlights harmful effects of ultra-processed foods on cognition; Brain function needn't decline with age, may improve
News items read by Laura Kennedy include: Anglo-Saxon connections with Byzantium shown in Sutton Hoo burials (details) (details) Pottery production in Iraq shows evidence of early specialization dating back 8,000 years (details) Ancient DNA and human migrations shed light on the genetic history of Indonesia (details) (details) Strontium isotope map used to decode the mystery of the origins of wildlife and individuals in the past (details) (details)
Highlights from Dr. Hoffman's trip to LithuaniaIs there a brand of Boswellia you recommend?I would like to start cooking with coconut oil. What do you recommend?What is the guide to taking strontium for bone health safely?Should I get the Shingrix vaccines after 4 covid shots and the annual flu shot?I've always had my T3 and T4 checked for my thyroid but never T2. How does it work?
How much of the flavanols do I lose by heating cocoa powder?My osteoporosis appears to be resolved with bone health nutrients and strontium. Should I continue taking them?Is melatonin indicated for osteoporosis? If so, at what dose?Is there any way of clearing the spike proteins from one's body after taking the jabs?Any recommendations on reducing the residual stiffness of polymyalgia rheumatica?
Leo Laporte, Harry McCracken, Christina Warren, and Lou Maresca discuss the evolving relationship between the tech industry and the incoming Trump administration, the future of TikTok in the U.S., advances in AI and its impact on everything from weather forecasting to web browsing, and much more. • Elon Musk and other tech billionaires are playing a major role in shaping President-elect Trump's transition team. The panel debated what this could mean for issues like antitrust regulation of Big Tech. • Trump has named entrepreneur and investor David Sacks as the White House AI and Crypto Czar. Sacks is an Elon Musk ally who has been critical of OpenAI. • The Hak Tuah cryptocurrency project suffered a 90% price crash shortly after launch amid controversy, in what may have been a "rug pull" scam. • Trump's pick to lead NASA, private astronaut Jared Isaacman, is expected to push the agency to partner more with SpaceX and the commercial space industry. But his close ties to Elon Musk could face political hurdles. • TikTok's future remains murky as U.S courts uphold a potential ban. The crew discusses the free speech implications and the role of geopolitics. EU also probes TikTok over Russian election interference. • Entrepreneur Frank McCourt's Project Liberty consortium is reportedly advancing a bid to acquire TikTok's U.S. operations, positioning it as a "people's bid." • The U.S. House is set to approve an additional $3 billion to fund the removal of Chinese telecom equipment like Huawei and ZTE from domestic networks. • Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger is departing after a challenging 3-year stint. The chip giant's future strategy is up in the air as it faces intensifying competition, but the chip company did outline breakthroughs at a conference in advanced transistors, packaging, and interconnects that could help it regain a manufacturing edge. • OpenAI is running a "12 Days of OpenAI" promotion highlighting new AI models and services. The TWiT panel debated whether it's mainly a technical showcase or a monetization push. • Google unveiled a weather forecasting AI model that it says outperforms the leading U.S. and European forecast systems, especially for predicting extreme events. • ElevenLabs launched a beta product that allows users to create and edit entire AI-generated podcast episodes, sparking discussions about the impact on human podcast creators. • With the rise of AI, could we see a new generation of AI-infused web browsers that better understand our behavior? A long blog post by tech guru Om Malik explored the possibilities. • In the wake of China's "Salt Typhoon" hacks of telecom networks, the FCC is proposing new cybersecurity rules - but with a twist that would allow law enforcement backdoor access. • In the latest twist in the CSAM scanning saga, Apple is being sued for abandoning the controversial child abuse image detection feature, after previously being pilloried for trying to implement it. • A sleeker, more accurate definition of a "second" based on atomic clocks using Strontium instead of Cesium atoms could be coming by 2030, enabling new scientific breakthroughs. • Just in time for Christmas, a pair of the iconic ruby slippers from The Wizard of Oz sold at auction for a whopping $28 million, a new record for movie memorabilia. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Harry McCracken, Christina Warren, and Louis Maresca Download or subscribe to This Week in Tech at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: canary.tools/twit - use code: TWIT expressvpn.com/twit lookout.com veeam.com ZipRecruiter.com/Twit
Leo Laporte, Harry McCracken, Christina Warren, and Lou Maresca discuss the evolving relationship between the tech industry and the incoming Trump administration, the future of TikTok in the U.S., advances in AI and its impact on everything from weather forecasting to web browsing, and much more. • Elon Musk and other tech billionaires are playing a major role in shaping President-elect Trump's transition team. The panel debated what this could mean for issues like antitrust regulation of Big Tech. • Trump has named entrepreneur and investor David Sacks as the White House AI and Crypto Czar. Sacks is an Elon Musk ally who has been critical of OpenAI. • The Hak Tuah cryptocurrency project suffered a 90% price crash shortly after launch amid controversy, in what may have been a "rug pull" scam. • Trump's pick to lead NASA, private astronaut Jared Isaacman, is expected to push the agency to partner more with SpaceX and the commercial space industry. But his close ties to Elon Musk could face political hurdles. • TikTok's future remains murky as U.S courts uphold a potential ban. The crew discusses the free speech implications and the role of geopolitics. EU also probes TikTok over Russian election interference. • Entrepreneur Frank McCourt's Project Liberty consortium is reportedly advancing a bid to acquire TikTok's U.S. operations, positioning it as a "people's bid." • The U.S. House is set to approve an additional $3 billion to fund the removal of Chinese telecom equipment like Huawei and ZTE from domestic networks. • Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger is departing after a challenging 3-year stint. The chip giant's future strategy is up in the air as it faces intensifying competition, but the chip company did outline breakthroughs at a conference in advanced transistors, packaging, and interconnects that could help it regain a manufacturing edge. • OpenAI is running a "12 Days of OpenAI" promotion highlighting new AI models and services. The TWiT panel debated whether it's mainly a technical showcase or a monetization push. • Google unveiled a weather forecasting AI model that it says outperforms the leading U.S. and European forecast systems, especially for predicting extreme events. • ElevenLabs launched a beta product that allows users to create and edit entire AI-generated podcast episodes, sparking discussions about the impact on human podcast creators. • With the rise of AI, could we see a new generation of AI-infused web browsers that better understand our behavior? A long blog post by tech guru Om Malik explored the possibilities. • In the wake of China's "Salt Typhoon" hacks of telecom networks, the FCC is proposing new cybersecurity rules - but with a twist that would allow law enforcement backdoor access. • In the latest twist in the CSAM scanning saga, Apple is being sued for abandoning the controversial child abuse image detection feature, after previously being pilloried for trying to implement it. • A sleeker, more accurate definition of a "second" based on atomic clocks using Strontium instead of Cesium atoms could be coming by 2030, enabling new scientific breakthroughs. • Just in time for Christmas, a pair of the iconic ruby slippers from The Wizard of Oz sold at auction for a whopping $28 million, a new record for movie memorabilia. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Harry McCracken, Christina Warren, and Louis Maresca Download or subscribe to This Week in Tech at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: canary.tools/twit - use code: TWIT expressvpn.com/twit lookout.com veeam.com ZipRecruiter.com/Twit
Leo Laporte, Harry McCracken, Christina Warren, and Lou Maresca discuss the evolving relationship between the tech industry and the incoming Trump administration, the future of TikTok in the U.S., advances in AI and its impact on everything from weather forecasting to web browsing, and much more. • Elon Musk and other tech billionaires are playing a major role in shaping President-elect Trump's transition team. The panel debated what this could mean for issues like antitrust regulation of Big Tech. • Trump has named entrepreneur and investor David Sacks as the White House AI and Crypto Czar. Sacks is an Elon Musk ally who has been critical of OpenAI. • The Hak Tuah cryptocurrency project suffered a 90% price crash shortly after launch amid controversy, in what may have been a "rug pull" scam. • Trump's pick to lead NASA, private astronaut Jared Isaacman, is expected to push the agency to partner more with SpaceX and the commercial space industry. But his close ties to Elon Musk could face political hurdles. • TikTok's future remains murky as U.S courts uphold a potential ban. The crew discusses the free speech implications and the role of geopolitics. EU also probes TikTok over Russian election interference. • Entrepreneur Frank McCourt's Project Liberty consortium is reportedly advancing a bid to acquire TikTok's U.S. operations, positioning it as a "people's bid." • The U.S. House is set to approve an additional $3 billion to fund the removal of Chinese telecom equipment like Huawei and ZTE from domestic networks. • Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger is departing after a challenging 3-year stint. The chip giant's future strategy is up in the air as it faces intensifying competition, but the chip company did outline breakthroughs at a conference in advanced transistors, packaging, and interconnects that could help it regain a manufacturing edge. • OpenAI is running a "12 Days of OpenAI" promotion highlighting new AI models and services. The TWiT panel debated whether it's mainly a technical showcase or a monetization push. • Google unveiled a weather forecasting AI model that it says outperforms the leading U.S. and European forecast systems, especially for predicting extreme events. • ElevenLabs launched a beta product that allows users to create and edit entire AI-generated podcast episodes, sparking discussions about the impact on human podcast creators. • With the rise of AI, could we see a new generation of AI-infused web browsers that better understand our behavior? A long blog post by tech guru Om Malik explored the possibilities. • In the wake of China's "Salt Typhoon" hacks of telecom networks, the FCC is proposing new cybersecurity rules - but with a twist that would allow law enforcement backdoor access. • In the latest twist in the CSAM scanning saga, Apple is being sued for abandoning the controversial child abuse image detection feature, after previously being pilloried for trying to implement it. • A sleeker, more accurate definition of a "second" based on atomic clocks using Strontium instead of Cesium atoms could be coming by 2030, enabling new scientific breakthroughs. • Just in time for Christmas, a pair of the iconic ruby slippers from The Wizard of Oz sold at auction for a whopping $28 million, a new record for movie memorabilia. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Harry McCracken, Christina Warren, and Louis Maresca Download or subscribe to This Week in Tech at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: canary.tools/twit - use code: TWIT expressvpn.com/twit lookout.com veeam.com ZipRecruiter.com/Twit
Leo Laporte, Harry McCracken, Christina Warren, and Lou Maresca discuss the evolving relationship between the tech industry and the incoming Trump administration, the future of TikTok in the U.S., advances in AI and its impact on everything from weather forecasting to web browsing, and much more. • Elon Musk and other tech billionaires are playing a major role in shaping President-elect Trump's transition team. The panel debated what this could mean for issues like antitrust regulation of Big Tech. • Trump has named entrepreneur and investor David Sacks as the White House AI and Crypto Czar. Sacks is an Elon Musk ally who has been critical of OpenAI. • The Hak Tuah cryptocurrency project suffered a 90% price crash shortly after launch amid controversy, in what may have been a "rug pull" scam. • Trump's pick to lead NASA, private astronaut Jared Isaacman, is expected to push the agency to partner more with SpaceX and the commercial space industry. But his close ties to Elon Musk could face political hurdles. • TikTok's future remains murky as U.S courts uphold a potential ban. The crew discusses the free speech implications and the role of geopolitics. EU also probes TikTok over Russian election interference. • Entrepreneur Frank McCourt's Project Liberty consortium is reportedly advancing a bid to acquire TikTok's U.S. operations, positioning it as a "people's bid." • The U.S. House is set to approve an additional $3 billion to fund the removal of Chinese telecom equipment like Huawei and ZTE from domestic networks. • Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger is departing after a challenging 3-year stint. The chip giant's future strategy is up in the air as it faces intensifying competition, but the chip company did outline breakthroughs at a conference in advanced transistors, packaging, and interconnects that could help it regain a manufacturing edge. • OpenAI is running a "12 Days of OpenAI" promotion highlighting new AI models and services. The TWiT panel debated whether it's mainly a technical showcase or a monetization push. • Google unveiled a weather forecasting AI model that it says outperforms the leading U.S. and European forecast systems, especially for predicting extreme events. • ElevenLabs launched a beta product that allows users to create and edit entire AI-generated podcast episodes, sparking discussions about the impact on human podcast creators. • With the rise of AI, could we see a new generation of AI-infused web browsers that better understand our behavior? A long blog post by tech guru Om Malik explored the possibilities. • In the wake of China's "Salt Typhoon" hacks of telecom networks, the FCC is proposing new cybersecurity rules - but with a twist that would allow law enforcement backdoor access. • In the latest twist in the CSAM scanning saga, Apple is being sued for abandoning the controversial child abuse image detection feature, after previously being pilloried for trying to implement it. • A sleeker, more accurate definition of a "second" based on atomic clocks using Strontium instead of Cesium atoms could be coming by 2030, enabling new scientific breakthroughs. • Just in time for Christmas, a pair of the iconic ruby slippers from The Wizard of Oz sold at auction for a whopping $28 million, a new record for movie memorabilia. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Harry McCracken, Christina Warren, and Louis Maresca Download or subscribe to This Week in Tech at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: canary.tools/twit - use code: TWIT expressvpn.com/twit lookout.com veeam.com ZipRecruiter.com/Twit
Leo Laporte, Harry McCracken, Christina Warren, and Lou Maresca discuss the evolving relationship between the tech industry and the incoming Trump administration, the future of TikTok in the U.S., advances in AI and its impact on everything from weather forecasting to web browsing, and much more. • Elon Musk and other tech billionaires are playing a major role in shaping President-elect Trump's transition team. The panel debated what this could mean for issues like antitrust regulation of Big Tech. • Trump has named entrepreneur and investor David Sacks as the White House AI and Crypto Czar. Sacks is an Elon Musk ally who has been critical of OpenAI. • The Hak Tuah cryptocurrency project suffered a 90% price crash shortly after launch amid controversy, in what may have been a "rug pull" scam. • Trump's pick to lead NASA, private astronaut Jared Isaacman, is expected to push the agency to partner more with SpaceX and the commercial space industry. But his close ties to Elon Musk could face political hurdles. • TikTok's future remains murky as U.S courts uphold a potential ban. The crew discusses the free speech implications and the role of geopolitics. EU also probes TikTok over Russian election interference. • Entrepreneur Frank McCourt's Project Liberty consortium is reportedly advancing a bid to acquire TikTok's U.S. operations, positioning it as a "people's bid." • The U.S. House is set to approve an additional $3 billion to fund the removal of Chinese telecom equipment like Huawei and ZTE from domestic networks. • Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger is departing after a challenging 3-year stint. The chip giant's future strategy is up in the air as it faces intensifying competition, but the chip company did outline breakthroughs at a conference in advanced transistors, packaging, and interconnects that could help it regain a manufacturing edge. • OpenAI is running a "12 Days of OpenAI" promotion highlighting new AI models and services. The TWiT panel debated whether it's mainly a technical showcase or a monetization push. • Google unveiled a weather forecasting AI model that it says outperforms the leading U.S. and European forecast systems, especially for predicting extreme events. • ElevenLabs launched a beta product that allows users to create and edit entire AI-generated podcast episodes, sparking discussions about the impact on human podcast creators. • With the rise of AI, could we see a new generation of AI-infused web browsers that better understand our behavior? A long blog post by tech guru Om Malik explored the possibilities. • In the wake of China's "Salt Typhoon" hacks of telecom networks, the FCC is proposing new cybersecurity rules - but with a twist that would allow law enforcement backdoor access. • In the latest twist in the CSAM scanning saga, Apple is being sued for abandoning the controversial child abuse image detection feature, after previously being pilloried for trying to implement it. • A sleeker, more accurate definition of a "second" based on atomic clocks using Strontium instead of Cesium atoms could be coming by 2030, enabling new scientific breakthroughs. • Just in time for Christmas, a pair of the iconic ruby slippers from The Wizard of Oz sold at auction for a whopping $28 million, a new record for movie memorabilia. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Harry McCracken, Christina Warren, and Louis Maresca Download or subscribe to This Week in Tech at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: canary.tools/twit - use code: TWIT expressvpn.com/twit lookout.com veeam.com ZipRecruiter.com/Twit
Leo Laporte, Harry McCracken, Christina Warren, and Lou Maresca discuss the evolving relationship between the tech industry and the incoming Trump administration, the future of TikTok in the U.S., advances in AI and its impact on everything from weather forecasting to web browsing, and much more. • Elon Musk and other tech billionaires are playing a major role in shaping President-elect Trump's transition team. The panel debated what this could mean for issues like antitrust regulation of Big Tech. • Trump has named entrepreneur and investor David Sacks as the White House AI and Crypto Czar. Sacks is an Elon Musk ally who has been critical of OpenAI. • The Hak Tuah cryptocurrency project suffered a 90% price crash shortly after launch amid controversy, in what may have been a "rug pull" scam. • Trump's pick to lead NASA, private astronaut Jared Isaacman, is expected to push the agency to partner more with SpaceX and the commercial space industry. But his close ties to Elon Musk could face political hurdles. • TikTok's future remains murky as U.S courts uphold a potential ban. The crew discusses the free speech implications and the role of geopolitics. EU also probes TikTok over Russian election interference. • Entrepreneur Frank McCourt's Project Liberty consortium is reportedly advancing a bid to acquire TikTok's U.S. operations, positioning it as a "people's bid." • The U.S. House is set to approve an additional $3 billion to fund the removal of Chinese telecom equipment like Huawei and ZTE from domestic networks. • Intel CEO Pat Gelsinger is departing after a challenging 3-year stint. The chip giant's future strategy is up in the air as it faces intensifying competition, but the chip company did outline breakthroughs at a conference in advanced transistors, packaging, and interconnects that could help it regain a manufacturing edge. • OpenAI is running a "12 Days of OpenAI" promotion highlighting new AI models and services. The TWiT panel debated whether it's mainly a technical showcase or a monetization push. • Google unveiled a weather forecasting AI model that it says outperforms the leading U.S. and European forecast systems, especially for predicting extreme events. • ElevenLabs launched a beta product that allows users to create and edit entire AI-generated podcast episodes, sparking discussions about the impact on human podcast creators. • With the rise of AI, could we see a new generation of AI-infused web browsers that better understand our behavior? A long blog post by tech guru Om Malik explored the possibilities. • In the wake of China's "Salt Typhoon" hacks of telecom networks, the FCC is proposing new cybersecurity rules - but with a twist that would allow law enforcement backdoor access. • In the latest twist in the CSAM scanning saga, Apple is being sued for abandoning the controversial child abuse image detection feature, after previously being pilloried for trying to implement it. • A sleeker, more accurate definition of a "second" based on atomic clocks using Strontium instead of Cesium atoms could be coming by 2030, enabling new scientific breakthroughs. • Just in time for Christmas, a pair of the iconic ruby slippers from The Wizard of Oz sold at auction for a whopping $28 million, a new record for movie memorabilia. Host: Leo Laporte Guests: Harry McCracken, Christina Warren, and Louis Maresca Download or subscribe to This Week in Tech at https://twit.tv/shows/this-week-in-tech Get episodes ad-free with Club TWiT at https://twit.tv/clubtwit Sponsors: canary.tools/twit - use code: TWIT expressvpn.com/twit lookout.com veeam.com ZipRecruiter.com/Twit
STRONGER BONES LIFESTYLE: REVERSING THE COURSE OF OSTEOPOROSIS NATURALLY
Welcome back to the Stronger Bones Lifestyle Podcast. In Episode 87, host Debi Robinson sits down again with orthopedic surgeon and bone health expert, Dr. Andy Bush, to delve into the intricacies of diagnosing, treating, and managing bone health. From advanced diagnostic tools like REMS and DEXA scans to the often-overlooked importance of lifestyle choices, this episode is packed with insightful information you'll not want to miss.***********************To learn more and join the Stronger Bones Lifestyle Community click the link below:https://debirobinson.com/the-stronger-bones-lifestyle-community/Membership is free for 30 days and you will not be asked to enter a credit card. I look forward to meeting you there!!!***********************Dr. Andy, a bone health maverick, operates a bone center in Chapel Hill, North Carolina, where he empowers patients to take control of their bone health through innovative techniques and personalized care plans. Throughout the discussion, Debi and Dr. Andy tackle issues surrounding false positives in bone density tests, the limitations of standard medical interventions, and the critical need for a more comprehensive, lifestyle-focused approach to bone health.Join Debi and Dr. Andy as they explore how optimizing your bone health goes beyond simple calcium and vitamin D supplementation. They discuss the importance of digestion, nutrient absorption, and muscle strength in maintaining fracture-resistant bones. Key Takeaways:[3:04] The demand for rems and the issues with that[7:42] Vibration plates[11:04] Strontium[18:53] Can we reverse bone loss?[24:21] The perfect formula for breaking[25:40] Its not just one thing – gathering a team to help reduce bone lossWhere to find Guest:WebsiteMemorable Quotes:"If the muscle gets strong then the bone will be strong." [9:02] - Dr. Andy"The bone doesn't care what happened yesterday, your bones lives in the moment." [9:53] - Dr. Andy "We don't need gadgets we need to do something in our lives like stand on one foot when you're brushing your teeth." [11:00] - Debi"There are just so many areas we need to go to first to replacing the pill the doctor recommended with the next layer of pills." [15:24] - Debi"That's what we need in the bone health world is confidence and reassuring." [24:05] - Debi"If you sit and do nothing you're going to fracture. If you have no muscle you'll have no bone." [24:42] - Dr. Andy"Ignore your bone and it goes away." [25:03] - Dr. AndyTo learn more about me and to stay connected, click on the links below:Instagram: @debirobinsonwellnessWebsite: DebiRobinson.comLearn more about and join the Healthy Gut Healthy Bones Program
NASA is pushing timekeeping to new levels of precision.
STRONGER BONES LIFESTYLE: REVERSING THE COURSE OF OSTEOPOROSIS NATURALLY
Welcome back to the Stronger Bones Lifestyle Podcast. In Episode 69, Debi welcomes back Dr. Priya Krishnamurthy, esteemed endocrinologist to answer more questions about bone health, osteoporosis and endocrinology.With a background in internal medicine, preventative medicine, and public health, Dr. Krishnamurthy has been in practice since 2008 and combines clinical endocrinology, lifestyle medicine, functional medicine, and mind-body medicine to provide a holistic approach to bone health. Today she and Debi discuss the critical importance of stress management for overall bone health and the biomechanics behind it as well as the role of various mineral supplements.The conversation shifts to the importance of protein intake, discussing the right amounts needed to prevent muscle loss and support bone health. Debi and Dr. Priya also explore what truly constitutes a bone health expert and how traditional as well as alternative medicine can play a role in managing conditions like osteoporosis and osteopenia.Join Debi and Dr. Priya as they shed light on essential yet often overlooked aspects of bone health, and advocate for a multi-faceted approach to managing and preventing bone-related diseases.Key Takeaways:[1:12] Stress management[2:02] Mindset change and how we perceive stress[3:09] Strontium[6:32] Protein[9:00] Amino Acids[9:18] What is a health expert[19:26] OsteopeniaWhere to Find Guest:Website Memorable Quotes:'It is absolutely critical that we learn how to face stress, how to manage stress, but it's also mindset change.' [1:56] - Dr. Priya"Not every endocrinologist is a bone health expert because not every endocrinologist even treats osteoporosis." [10:16] - Dr. Priya"We need more of us women doing work in women's health." [11:47] - Dr. Priya"No matter how much work, no matter how hard. All of this, I say, forget it, I'm not doing this anymore. And then I'm like, wait, what about all those women?" [18:05] - Debi"Don't try to look like Barbie, you're gonna just have lousy bones." [20:51] - Dr. Priya To learn more about me and to stay connected, click on the links below:Instagram: @debirobinsonwellnessWebsite: DebiRobinson.comHealthy Gut Healthy Bones Program
Tonight, look up and enjoy the independence fireworks whose colors were created in the stars.
On this episode, Nate is joined by ER doctor, nuclear power advocate, and podcast host Chris Keefer for a broad ranging conversation including the basics of nuclear energy, how he engages with opposing opinions, and hypotheticals for a future medical system. Coming from a broad background, Chris understands what it means to have a human to human conversation and put together the pieces of our systemic puzzle in a clear and compelling way. What role could nuclear play for our future energy needs - and how are different countries making use of it today? How can we prioritize the health and safety of people under energetic and resource constraints? Most of all, how do we listen to others that we don't agree with - regardless of the issue - to foster the diverse perspectives necessary to navigate the coming challenges of the human predicament? About Chris Keefer: Chris Keefer MD, CCFP-EM is a Staff Emergency Physician at St Joseph's Health Centre and a Lecturer for the Department of Family and Community Medicine at the University of Toronto. He is also an avid advocate for expanding nuclear power as the President of Canadians for Nuclear Energy and Director of Doctors for Nuclear Energy. Additionally, he is the host of the Decouple Podcast exploring the most pressing questions in energy, climate, environment, politics, and philosophy. PDF Transcript Show Notes 00:00 - Chris Keefer works + info, Decouple Podcast, Canadians for Nuclear Energy 04:45 - Egalitarian hunter gatherer society, infant mortality 05:12 - Bow drill fire 07:10 - Yukon 07:30 - Humans and livestock outweigh wild mammals 50:1, not in the Yukon 08:10 - Dr. Paul Farmer 08:45 - Most humans use to work in agriculture, ~15% now involved in healthcare 10:56 - Ontario nuclear power, one of lowest electric grid in the world 12:01 - Justin Trudeau 12:24 - Simcoe Clinic, Canadian Center for Victims of Torture 14:01 - World population over time 14:36 - Paleodemography 14:59 - Degrowth 15:19 - Infant mortality in developed countries 15:55 - Tight link between energy, materials and GDP 20:54 - Duck and Cover Drills 21:05 - Environmental Movement and Nuclear 21:21 - Nagasaki bomb radiation injuries 21:49 - High dose radiation is deadly, low dose radiation less so 21:05 - Strontium-90 found in the teeth of babies 21:10 - Atmospheric weapons testing ban 22:33 - Fukushima meltdown, health impacts are negligible 23:09 - 20,000 people died from the Fukushima earthquake and following tsunami 23:47 - Fukushima contaminated water has been filtered out and is safe 24:24 - How radiation is measured 26:02 - Health effects from alcohol 26:16 - Drinking culture in the U.S. 27:22 - Nuclear energy density, land footprint 28:23 - Best nuclear applications and limitations 30:01 - Those who live in nuclear powered areas fare better 30:33 - Price of nuclear energy over the lifetime 30:45 - Nuclear power in France 31:18 - Canada energy history, center for nuclear research outside of the Manhattan Project 32:23 - 1000 people die prematurely every year due to coal 33:25 - Ontario population 33:38 - Candu Reactors 34:15 - Levelized cost of electricity, skewed with renewables 37:01 - Lazard Graphs 38:09 - Mark Jacobson 41:07 - Carbon emissions by power source 41:23 - Lifespan of nuclear plants 43:11 - Land use change impacts 43:31 - Nuclear and job creation 46:05 - US spending on military vs healthcare 48:49 - Meiji Restoration 49:33 - Vaclav Smil 50:42 - AI electricity demands 50:55 - AI risks 51:29 - Meredith Angwin 52:42 - Nuclear fuel 53:10 - 46% of uranium enrichment happens in Russia 54:15 - Known Uranium Reserves 54:25 - Haber Bosch 54:55 - Breeder Reactors 55:42 - Uranium in seawater 56:14 - Slow vs Fast Neutrons, fertile elements 57:04 - Sodium Fast Reactor 58:45 - China built a nuclear reactor in less than 4 years 1:00:05 - Defense in depth 1:01:11 - EMP, solar flare 1:01:30 - HBO's Chernobyl, wildlife thriving in chernobyl area 1:03:13 - Death toll from radiation in Chernobyl 1:05:13 - Scientific literature and confirmation bias 1:08:12 - Chernobyl Children's International 1:08:44 - Genome sequencing of highest exposures to radiation from chernobyl 1:09:09 - Germline mutations if the father smokes 1:10:02 - The Great Simplification animated video 1:10:32 - Peak Oil 1:12:10 - Complex 6-continent supply chains 1:12:30 - I, Pencil 1:15:19 - Nuclear Fusion 1:16:24 - Lawrence Livermore 1:17:45 - Tomas Murphy, Galactic Scale Energy 1:18:11 - Small Modular Reactor 1:19:26 - Cost saving in nuclear comes from scaling 1:19:34 - Wright's Law, economies of multiples 1:23:33 - Biden administration policies and advances on nuclear 1:24:00 - Non-profit industrial complex 1:24:24 - The size of the US non-profit economy 1:24:44 - Sierra Club, anti-nuclear history 1:25:14 - Rocky Mountain Club 1:27:15 - Hans Rosling 1:27:32 - Somalia infant mortality rate 1:27:42 - Cuba 1990s economic shock and response 1:27:42 - Vandana Shiva + TGS Episode 1:30:27 - Cognitive Dissonance 1:31:45 - Jonathan Haidt + TGS Podcast, Righteous Mind 1:32:48 - Fatality and hospitalization statistics for COVID for first responders 1:33:22 - Truckers protest in Ottawa 1:34:15 - The problem with superchickens 1:36:54 - How social media tries to keep you online 1:37:12 - Paleopsychology 1:37:55 - Tristan Harris and Daniel Schmachtenberger on Joe Rogan 1:39:45 - John Kitzhaber + TGS Episode, Robert Lustig + TGS Episode 1:39:55 - US healthcare 20% of GDP, 50% of the world's medical prescriptions are in the US 1:41:55 - Superutilizers 1:42:37 - Cuban medical system, spending, life expectancy, infant mortality 1:43:06 - Cuban export of pharmaceuticals 1:44:08 - Preventative medicine, chronic disease management 1:44:25 - Cuban doctor to person ratio, rest of the world 1:48:47 - Social determinants of health 1:49:20 - Cement floor reducing illness in Mexico 1:50:03 - Hygiene hypothesis 1:50:28 - Zoonotic disease and human/animal cohabitation 1:50:50 - Roundworm life cycle 1:52:38 - Acceptable miss rates 1:53:16 - Cancer screening effectiveness 1:53:58 - Drugs produced from nuclear plant byproducts 1:58:18 - Timothy O'Leary 2:02:28 - Superabundance 2:02:40 - Julian Simons and Paul Ehrlich bet 2:02:15 - Malthusian 2:06:08 - Pickering Plant Watch this video episode on YouTube
Der er nok mange der kender den der med “vi er alle gjort af stjernestof”, og det er også rigtigt – alle de atomer der udgør vores verden kommer fra stjernerne. Men der er stadig ubesvarede spørgsmål især om de grundstoffer som er tungere end jern – og hvilken rolle henholdsvis supernovaer og kilonovaer spiller. I denne episode af RumSnak har vi besøg af professor Darach Watson fra Niels Bohr Institutet, som blandt andet har været på jagt efter strontium og tellur i strålingen fra fjerne kilonovaer – de gigantiske eksplosioner som opstår når to neutronstjerner støder sammen. I de korte nyheder fortæller vi om månefartøjet Odysseus og om vand på planeter omkring fjerne stjerner, og så er der masser af bonus – om LEGO-modeller, tv-serier, live-events og Grundstofdag. Lyt med
I 2001 støder tre mænd på to stykker mystisk varmt metal i den ellers sneklædte skov i de georgiske bjerge. Intetanende tager mændene de radioaktive kilder med sig. For hvad de ikke ved er, at metallet i virkeligheden er strontium, som er blevet glemt af sovjetunionen.Periodisk – en RAKKERPAK original produceret af Rakkerpak Productions. Historierne du hører bygger på journalistisk research og fakta. De kan indeholde fiktive elementer som for eksempel dialog. Hvis du kan lide min fortælling, så husk at gå ind og abonnér, give en anmeldelse og fortæl dine venner om Periodisk. Podcasten er blevet til med støtte fra Novo Nordisk Fonden. Hvis du vil vide mere kan du besøge vores website periodisk.dk Afsnittet er skrevet og tilrettelagt af Frederik Holst Tor Arnbjørn og Dorte Palle er producere Rene Slott står for lyddesign og mix Simon Bennebjerg er vært
Nuclear technology is having its moment, according to Zeno Power cofounder and CEO Tyler Bernstein.NASA has used radioisotope tech since the 1960s, but the systems have historically been too expensive and heavy to be widely used. Zeno Power, which develops radioisotope power systems (RPS) that are lighter, more efficient, and more cost-effective than legacy systems, is trying to change that.How it works? Zeno Power's RPS works by converting the heat from decaying radioisotopes into electricity. Its initial system uses Strontium-90 (Sr-90), an abundant and affordable fuel that has been used in thousands of legacy RPSs. The core innovation is in the fuel design and shielding technology, a key issue given Sr-90's radioactive properties.The company has had a recent string of commercial successes, including a number of unannounced contracts, but some of the public wins are:A $30M STRATFI contract awarded in May to build a radioisotope-powered satellite for the U.S. Air Force by 2025.A $15M NASA Tipping Point award to develop an Americium-241 (Am-241) radioisotope Stirling generator (RSG) for long-duration lunar missions.This week's Pathfinder episode features Tyler Bernstein, Zeno Power's CEO. The company was founded in 2018 by Tyler and two other Vanderbilt undergrads after working on a project to design a nuclear reactor for a Boeing 777. Today, Mo and Tyler discuss:Zeno Power's origin storyA brief history of nuclear power in spaceThe benefits of using radioisotope power systemsThe future of fission and fusionAnd much more…This episode is brought to you by Epsilon3, software for complex engineering, testing, and operational procedures. Learn more at https://www.epsilon3.io/• Chapters • 00:00 - Intro and Ad Break 01:46 - Who is Tyler Bernstein and what is Zeno Power? 02:53 - Nuclear powered 77705:42 - How are nuclear reactors used today? 11:42 - A history of nuclear in space 14:04 - Nuclear regulations 17:48 - Zeno's core product and customer 21:33 - Disposal and containment during development 22:44 - Cost effectiveness vs traditional power systems24:43 - Epsilon3 Ad Break25:12 - Future of nuclear in space 28:37 - Customer targets outside of space 29:41 - Zeno's competitors 31:56 - Building a team around nuclear 38:05 - Zeno's products in 10 years 39:55 - State of nuclear energy today and its regulations 43:57 - Fusion vs Fission 46:19 - Other exciting space companies?• Show notes • Zeno Power's website — https://www.zenopower.com/Zeno Power's socials — https://twitter.com/zeno_powerMo's socials — https://twitter.com/itsmoislam Payload's socials — https://twitter.com/payloadspace / https://www.linkedin.com/company/payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Watch: https://www.youtube.com/@payloadspace Pathfinder archive — Listen: https://pod.payloadspace.com/episodes • About us • Pathfinder is brought to you by Payload, a modern space media brand built from the ground up for a new age of space exploration and commercialization. We deliver need-to-know news and insights daily to 15,000+ commercial, civil, and military space leaders. Payload is read by decision-makers at every leading new space company, along with c-suite leaders at all of the aerospace & defense primes. We're also read on Capitol Hill, in the Pentagon, and at space agencies around the world. Payload began as a weekly email sent to a few friends and coworkers. Today, we're a team distributed across four time zones and two continents, publishing three media properties across multiple platforms: 1) Payload, our flagship daily newsletter, sends M-F @ 9am Eastern (https://newsletter.payloadspace.com/) 2) Pathfinder publishes weekly on Tuesday mornings (pod.payloadspace.com) 3) Polaris, our weekly policy publication, hits inboxes Tuesday (https://polaris.payloadspace.com/) 4) Parallax, our weekly space science briefing, hits inboxes Thursday (https://parallax.payloadspace.com/)
Music behind DJ: Hank Levine - "Banjo Rock" [0:00:00] Lefty Frizzell - "Travellin' Blues" [0:04:06] Terry Fell - "That's What I Like" [0:08:12] Lou MIllet - "Just You And Me" [0:09:58] Smiley Maxedon - "You've Lost Too Much" [0:11:58] George Jones - "Taggin' Along" [0:14:54] Music behind DJ: Hank Levine - "Banjo Rock (at 33 RPM +8)" [0:17:50] Hank Levine And His Orchestra - "Image Part 1" [0:21:33] The Johnson Brothers - "Strontium Ninety" [0:23:27] Elton Britt - "Uranium Fever" [0:25:25] Brenda Lee - "Thanks A Lot" [0:27:33] Eddie Jackson and his Swingsters - "Rock And Roll Baby" [0:30:18] Bill Floyd - "Heartbreak" [0:32:50] Music behind DJ: The Dynasty's - "Birmingham" [0:35:16] Loretta Lynn - "I Wanna Be Free" [0:38:28] Tommy La Beff - "Lonely" [0:40:43] Hank Killian - "Folsom Prison Blues" [0:43:41] Melba Montgomery - "The Right Time To Lose My Mind" [0:46:21] Jerry Lee Lewis - "Walking The Floor Over You" [0:49:23] Music behind DJ: The Dynasty's - "Birmingham" [0:51:09] Johny McGee - "I'll Have The Last Laugh" [0:53:08] Joe and Rose Lee Maphis - "Southern Bell of Birmingham" [0:54:59] Music behind DJ: The Dynasty's - "Birmingham" [0:58:07] https://www.wfmu.org/playlists/shows/129658
Music behind DJ: Hank Levine - "Banjo Rock" [0:00:00] Lefty Frizzell - "Travellin' Blues" [0:04:06] Terry Fell - "That's What I Like" [0:08:12] Lou MIllet - "Just You And Me" [0:09:58] Smiley Maxedon - "You've Lost Too Much" [0:11:58] George Jones - "Taggin' Along" [0:14:54] Music behind DJ: Hank Levine - "Banjo Rock (at 33 RPM +8)" [0:17:50] Hank Levine And His Orchestra - "Image Part 1" [0:21:33] The Johnson Brothers - "Strontium Ninety" [0:23:27] Elton Britt - "Uranium Fever" [0:25:25] Brenda Lee - "Thanks A Lot" [0:27:33] Eddie Jackson and his Swingsters - "Rock And Roll Baby" [0:30:18] Bill Floyd - "Heartbreak" [0:32:50] Music behind DJ: The Dynasty's - "Birmingham" [0:35:16] Loretta Lynn - "I Wanna Be Free" [0:38:28] Tommy La Beff - "Lonely" [0:40:43] Hank Killian - "Folsom Prison Blues" [0:43:41] Melba Montgomery - "The Right Time To Lose My Mind" [0:46:21] Jerry Lee Lewis - "Walking The Floor Over You" [0:49:23] Music behind DJ: The Dynasty's - "Birmingham" [0:51:09] Johny McGee - "I'll Have The Last Laugh" [0:53:08] Joe and Rose Lee Maphis - "Southern Bell of Birmingham" [0:54:59] Music behind DJ: The Dynasty's - "Birmingham" [0:58:07] https://www.wfmu.org/playlists/shows/129658
The US Navy may be midway through a continuing cover-up out west. Ben, Matt and Noel speculate about the recent news from Russia. Over in Delaware, a small town wants to give corporations the right to vote, prompting a troubling conversation about the future of individual rights. All this and more in this week's strange news segment.They don't want you to read our book.: https://static.macmillan.com/static/fib/stuff-you-should-read/See omnystudio.com/listener for privacy information.
Ich habe eine neue Armbanduhr, die mich etwas verwirrt: Sie leuchtet an sich nicht im Dunkeln, beziehungsweise nur dann, wenn durch einen Türspalt noch etwas Licht fällt. Mach ich die Tür ganz zu, leuchtet nichts. Kann das sein? Wenn deine Uhr Leuchtmarkierungen trägt, brauchen die helles Licht, damit sie später im Dunkeln noch leuchten. Wie trägst du deine Uhr? Unter dem Hemdsärmel? Ja. Wenn, wie es im Winterhalbjahr der Fall ist, die Uhr die meiste lichte Zeit unterm Ärmel verbringt, dann passiert da natürlich nichts. Du meinst, die Ziffern würden sich andernfalls mit Licht aufladen? So könnte man das formulieren. Diese sogenannten Leuchtfarben, genauer Nachleuchtfarben, nutzen einen Effekt, der schon ziemlich lange bekannt ist, wenn auch, als er entdeckt worden ist, wahrscheinlich noch kein Mensch verstanden hat, wie er funktioniert. Es gibt Berichte aus dem 17. Jahrhundert, wonach ein Mensch in Bologna einen Leuchtstein gefunden haben, besser gesagt, hergestellt haben soll. Der war Zauberer oder Chemiker oder was? Wahrscheinlich Alchimist. Und wie Alchimisten das gemacht haben, hat er wohl verschiedenste Sachen zusammen erhitzt und bei einer Kombination kam eben Bariumsulfid heraus, eine Verbindung aus dem Schwermetall Barium und dem Element Schwefel. Viele Sulfide besitzen die Fähigkeit zu leuchten, wenn sie in helles Licht kommen. Zinksulfid kann so was auch, Calciumsulfid und eben auch Sulfide von Barium und Strontium. Und das ist in meiner Uhr drin? Etwas in der Art. Inzwischen nimmt man eher Verbindungen mit Seltenerdmetallen. Früher verwendete man auch Mischungen aus luminiszierenden Substanzen und Radium. Dann war die Uhr radioaktiv. Sie strahlte und leuchtete immer. Als Universalgelehrter der nd.Redaktion weiß der Wissenschaftsredakteur Dr. Steffen Schmidt auf fast jede Frage eine Antwort – und wenn doch nicht, beantwortet er eben eine andere. Alle Folgen zum Nachhören auf: dasnd.de/schmidt Als Universalgelehrter der nd.Redaktion weiß der Wissenschaftsredakteur Dr. Steffen Schmidt auf fast jede Frage eine Antwort – und wenn doch nicht, beantwortet er eben eine andere. Alle Folgen zum Nachhören auf: dasnd.de/schmidt Als Universalgelehrter der nd.Redaktion weiß der Wissenschaftsredakteur Dr. Steffen Schmidt auf fast jede Frage eine Antwort – und wenn doch nicht, beantwortet er eben eine andere. Alle Folgen zum Nachhören auf: dasnd.de/schmidt Wie kommt heute Leuchtfarbe aufs Zifferblatt? Maschinell und ohne Radioaktivität. Es gibt aber auch einen Schweizer Hersteller, der Tritium, das radioaktive schwerste Isotop des Wasserstoffs, in winzigen Glasröhrchen unterbringt, die mit Leuchtstoff beschichtet sind. Und der leuchtet durch die Bestrahlung des Tritiums auch ohne Anregung durch Sonnenlicht. Für Taucheruhren ist das ganz sinnvoll. Und deine Uhr, kann die leuchten? Nee, meine leuchtet gar nicht. Du brauchst nachts keine Uhrzeitinformation? Dafür habe ich ja den Wecker. Und wenn ich bei dem auf den Knopf drücke, dann wird das Zifferblatt beleuchtet. Und noch eine Spezialfrage: Glaubst du, Linkshänder tragen die Uhr links oder rechts? Linkshänder werden die wohl eher rechts tragen. Wenn du schon mal versucht hast, die Uhr mit einer Hand am Arm festzumachen – das macht sich mit der Leithand immer besser.
Joining us today to explore why taking a functional approach to your health, your gut, and osteoporosis is key is Laura Frontiero, NP.=>>FREE Stronger Bones Masterclass (Gain Access Now!)=>>FREE 7-Day Osteoporosis Kickstart=>>Apply to join the Stronger Bones Solution Program w/ the BoneCoach™ Team***Topics Covered0:00 - Episode start2:44 - Tell us about your background in western medicine as a nurse practitioner, clinical bone densitometrist, working in an osteoporosis clinic.3:59 - What does the western medicine approach to osteoporosis look like from start to finish?6:25 - How are things different from a functional medicine perspective for osteoporosis?14:33 - What improvements in bone density can people see in a given time period?16:30 - Why big changes in bone density in short periods of time could be a red flag.17:45 - Fractures and breaks are the same thing (but there are some differences)18:48 - Why it's so important for your bone density technicians to be ISCD certified.21:05 - Strontium effect on bone density22:29 - Why you might have “normal” bone density and still have osteoporosis.24:40 - What can affect bone quality?25:46 - What has Laura seen in her vegan patients' bone density scores?28:24 - What are some proactive things people can do to prevent bone loss? 31:37 - We live in a toxic world. Some of Laura's pearls for finding your way to better health.33:33 - The one area of your health you need to focus on now.34:19 - There is a MAJOR connection between your gut health and your bones38:23 - What are the detox pathways and why is it important to make sure they are open before starting a detox protocol?41:06 - Where can you find Laura Frontiero?***Resources MentionedFind all resources mentioned and show notes @=>> https://bonecoach.com/laura-frontiero-osteoporosis-gut-health***What can you do to support your bone health and this podcast?1. Hit the “Subscribe” Button. 2. Leave a review. Thank you!
Joe Mangano, Executive Director for the Radiation and Public Health Project discusses years-long and recent studies that show evidence of high levels of cancer-causing strontium 90 in the teeth of babies born when weapons testing was being done, along with evidence that shows similar results in those living near nuclear reactors today.
Margie Bissinger, MS, PT, CHC is a physical therapist, integrative health coach, and happiness trainer. She has over 25 years of experience helping people with osteoporosis and osteopenia improve their bone health through an integrative comprehensive approach. She is the author of Osteoporosis: An Exercise Guide, and the creator of the Happy Bones, Happy Life online program. Margie has lectured to Fortune 500 companies, government agencies, hospitals, and women's groups throughout the country. She has been featured in the New York Times, Menopause Management, and OB-GYN News, and contributed to numerous health and fitness books. In this episode, Margie is interviewed by her husband, Dr. Craig Bissinger. Together they answer osteoporosis questions that were asked by her community. Links Happy Bones Roadmap - 4 Live Classes Starting May 2nd - https://www.happyboneshappylife.com/the-happy-bones-roadmap-optin-page Episode 186 with Dr. R. Keith McCormick on Osteoporosis Medications: Pros and Cons - https://margiebissinger.com/186-osteoporosis-medications-pros-and-cons-dr-r-keith-mccormick/ Use coupon code Happy for 20% off all products Upgraded Formulas - Stabilized Nano Minerals - https://www.upgradedformulas.com/pages/kit?rfsn=6775705.0de38c&utm_source=refersion&utm_medium=affiliate&utm_campaign=6775705.0de38c Magnesium - Transdermal - https://livingthegoodlifenaturally.com/ Use coupon code Happy for a 10% discount Timestamps [02:26] Physical Therapists and Osteoporosis [08:07] Phosphonate - Bad For Your Bones? [19:02] Strontium, Is It Helping Us Build Big Bones? [23:31] Does a Rebounder Provide Enough Ground Force to Stimulate Your Bones? [29:34] Vitamin D Absorption - Are Your Levels Persistently Low? [34:57] On Hands and Knees Gardening - How to Avoid Rounding Your Back and Shoulders DISCLAIMER – The information presented on this podcast should not be construed as medical advice. It is not intended to replace consultation with your physician or healthcare provider. The ideas shared on this podcast are the expressed opinions of the guests and do not always reflect those of Margie Bissinger and Happy Bones, Happy Life Podcast.
The world's environmental problems demand solutions for the common good, which in turn necessitate environmental diplomacy. With us to untangle the messy history of environmental diplomacy is Mark Lytle. In addition to his long tenure as a professor at Bard College, Mark has taught at Yale, Vassar, and University College Dublin. Mark's books include The Origins of the Iranian-American Alliance, 1941-1953, America's Uncivil Wars: The Sixties Era from Elvis to the Fall of Richard Nixon, The Gentle Subversive: Rachel Carson, Silent Spring, and the Rise of the Environmental Movement, and The All-Consuming Nation: Pursuing the American Dream Since World War II.
Presolar Silicon Carbide Grains of Types Y and Z: Their Strontium and Barium Isotopic Compositions and Stellar Origins by Nan Liu et al. on Wednesday 21 September We report the Sr and Ba isotopic compositions of 18 presolar SiC grains of types Y (11) and Z (7), rare types commonly argued to have formed in lower-than-solar metallicity asymptotic giant branch (AGB) stars. We find that the Y and Z grains show higher 88Sr/87Sr and more variable 138Ba/136Ba ratios than mainstream (MS) grains. According to FRANEC Torino AGB models, the Si, Sr, and Ba isotopic compositions of our Y and Z grains can be consistently explained if the grains came from low mass AGB stars with 0.15 Zsun
The be a Sherpa weekend retreat is unveiled on this episode by Brian along with his association with Johnny Bic. Biros forever.Brian digs deep into his cooking skills bag of tricks to pass on valuable information about gunpowder, Lithium, Strontium 9, sea water and testicles.On a serious note the Brian's discuss the versatility of Twine and the inescapable knots that follow.This and moron the Siamese Herring Experiment.
In today's podcast we cover four crucial cyber and technology topics, including: 1.API flaw in financial firm could have allowed mass account takeovers 2.Hamas-linked threat actors target Israeli industries in large campaign 3.Fin7 criminal from Ukraine sentenced to prison 4.Microsoft begins disrupting Russian cyber criminal infrastructureI'd love feedback, feel free to send your comments and feedback to | cyberandtechwithmike@gmail.com
Look, up in the sky! It's a bird! It's...a plane...spraying us with chemicals? Let's break it down.We've all seen it: you look up in the sky and observe an airplane flying overhead at 30,000 feet. Behind it is a long white trail that doesn't dissipate; it just chills there, in suspended animation. This is called stratospheric aerosol injection, a purposeful dispersal of chemicals into our atmosphere. Some will refer to this as "chemtrails", however that is not a scientific term and is often used to discredit those fighting against geoengineering.Climate manipulation is used by the military industrial complex to engineer weather for the purpose of managing our enemies' ecosystems. What happens when our military prevents rain over our adversaries, halting growth of crops, crippling food production? Armies can't fight if they can't eat.It's important to note that governments have been engaging in stratospheric aerosol injections dispersing mercury, barium, strontium, and aluminum into the sky for nearly 7 decades. Now, scientists have all but admitted their use, contending that Solar Radiation Management will reflect sunlight back to outer space, halting global warming.Ironically, It is the spraying of these very chemicals which cause the planet to warm, destroying oceanic life, inflicting massive droughts in some areas and torrential downpours in others. Untold billions of dollars have been spent cleaning up the dangerous effects of climate manipulation. Now they recklessly gaslight us trying to convince the public that the very destructive activities causing global climatic terror is what is needed to fix our ecosystem. Get more of The Daily Breakdown here: https://breakdradio.com/category/the-daily-breakdown/Follow on all the socials here: https://breakdradio.contactin.bio/
Diese Woche beschäftigen wir uns mit dem Salzgehalt im Meerwasseraquarium, einem Wert der immer wieder von vielen Aquarianern nicht als besonders wichtig eingestuft wird. Vielmehr sind es oft Calcium, Karbonathärte, Magesnium usw. auf die die meisten ihren Fokus legen. Der Salzgehalt wird meistens zwar gemessen, aber die Messergebnisse teilweise stiefmütterlich behandelt. Das kann aber böse nach hinten losgehen. Denn der Salzgehalt im Meerwasseraquarium ist einer der wichtigsten Messwerte, weil er indirekt auch die Konzentration aller im Wasser vorhandenen Stoffe definiert und somit für diese Stoffe den tatsächlichen Gehalt abbildet. Das bedeutet grob ausgedrückt, ist der Salzgehalt falsch eingestellt, so sind auch sämtliche Mengenelemente und Spurenelemente falsch eingestellt. Was ist nun aber der Salzgehalt im Meerwasseraquarium? Der Salzgehalt sagt aus, wieviel Salz in einem Liter Wasser gelöst ist. Im natürlichen Meerwasser sind rund 35 Gramm pro Liter Wasser gelöst. Das ist auch der Wert, den wir in unseren Meerwasseraquarien anstreben. Es ist nicht entscheidend, ob nun 34 oder 35 Gramm Salz pro Liter Meerwasser vorliegen, sondern dass der Salzgehalt nahezu konstant ist und keinen Schwankungen unterliegt. Jede Schwankung egal nach oben oder unten bedeutet einen enormen Stress für Korallen und Fische. Bei Korallen zeigt sich das häufig dadurch, dass sich die Polypen nicht mehr richtig öffnen, die Korallen nicht mehr wachsen oder auch ihre Farben schlechter werden. Bei Fischen ist besonders ein zu hoher Salzgehalt problematisch, da sie dadurch wesentlich anfälliger für Fischkrankheiten werden. Das Absenken des Salzgehaltes kann bei einem Ektoparasitenbefall wie z.B. der Weißpünktchenkrankheit ganz gezielt bei der Behandlung eingesetzt werden. Das ist aber nur in reinen Fischbecken ohne Korallen wegen der bereits genannten Konsequenzen zu empfehlen. Auch Seesterne, Seeigel und Garnelen reagieren sehr stark auf Schwankungen beim Salzgehalt, weshalb besonders beim Einsetzen auf eine entsprechende langsame und schonende Eingewöhnung ankommt. Idealerweise sollte der Salzgehalt im Meerwasseraquarium konstant zwischen 34 und 35 Gramm pro Liter liegen. Für Schwankungen im Salzgehalt gibt es verschiedenste Ursachen. Die häufigste Ursache für Schwankungen im Salzgehalt sind falsch durch geführte Wasserwechsel. Das kann daran liegen, dass die entnommene Wassermenge nicht exakt der Menge entspricht, die zugegeben wird, oder auch das frisch angesetzte Meerwasser einen zu geringen bzw. zu hohen Salzgehalt hat. Der Salzgehalt steigt z.B. an, wenn Wasser im Meerwasseraquarium verdunstet und diese nicht nachgefüllt wird. Das ist ein Punkt, warum der Verdunstungsausgleich bei Meerwasseraquarien immer....... Viel Spaß beim Anhören dieser neuen Folge! Mein Pflegemittel-Onlineshop: Kennst du meine Profi-Pflegemittel für Meerwasseraquarien? Als treuer Podcasthörer erhälst du einen Sonderrabatt von 10% in unserem Onlineshop www.aquacura.de. Sichere dir jetzt einen Sonderrabatt von 10% auf deinen gesamten Warenkorb im Aqua Cura Shop. Rabattcode: 10 www.aquacura.de Dort findest Du die besten Wasserwasseraquaristik-Pflegemittel, die wir auch bei allen unseren Kunden in über 2000 Aquarienwartungen verwenden. Wenn du dich für eines der bereits mit 10% rabattierten Sparpakete wie zum Beispiel eine hochwirksame Calciumlösung und eine Lösung zur Stabilisierung der Karbonathärte entscheidest sparst du mit dem Rabattcode 10 satte 20% . Alle Produkte bei uns im Shop bestehen aus den hochwertigsten Rohstoffen und wurden langen Praxistests vor der Markteinführung unterzogen.. Gehe auf www.aquacura.de und sichere dir jetzt deinen Rabatt. Hierfür muss du nur im Warenkorb im Rabattfeld die Zahl 10 eingeben. Rabattcode: 10 Profi-Beratung durch Markus Mahl: Da brauchst Hilfe bei einem Problem mit deinem Meerwasseraquarium? Hier kannst du die Beratung buchen: >>>>> Beratung durch Markus Mahl kostenlose Checklisten für dein Meerwasseraquarium : Hier findest du die kostenlose Checklisten für dein Meerwasseraquarium: https://aktion.aquacura.de/Geschenk Die Dosierung von Spurenelementen wird sehr kontrovers unter Meerwasseraquarianern diskutiert. Die einen geben regelmäßigen Spurenelementpräparate zu und freuen sich über das gesunde Wachstum ihrer Korallen, während andere keinerlei Spurenelemente zugeben und die Korallen trotzdem wachsen. Dann gibt es noch die dritte Gruppe, für die nach der Zugabe von Spurenelementen richtige Problem mit ihrem Becken bekommen. Doch was sind eigentlich Spurenelemente? Spurenelemente sind Elemente, die im natürlichen Meerwasser in äußerst geringen Konzentrationen vorkommen. Das bedeutet, alle Elemente deren Konzentration unter 1 mg/l liegt. Elemente im Bereich von 1-10 mg/l werden als Makroelemente bezeichnet. In der Meerwasseraquaristik wird hier eine kleine Ausnahme gemacht, da auch Elemente mit einer höheren Konzentration kleiner 1 mg/ l wie z.B. Strontium in Spurenelementlösungen enthalten sind. Im natürlichen Meerwasser sind mehr als 70 Mikro- und Makroelemente enthalten................... Hörbuch-Meerwasseraquarium: Erfahre alles war für ein Meerwasseraquarum wichtig ist in meinem Hörbuch "Meerwasseraquarium - Aquarium bauen und Pflegen wie die Profis" Du kannst dir das Hörbuch sofort herunterladen und anhören wann und wo immer du möchtest. Grundlage für das Hörbuch ist mein Buch: Amazon-Bestseller: "Meerwasseraquarium - Aquarium bauen und pflegen wie die Profis" Neben dem Hörbuch erhälst du noch 4 PDFs zum Downloads: Zudem einem Profi-Pflegeplan, einem 37 Seiten bebilderter Tierteil (Meerwasserfische, Korallen, Muscheln, Garnelen, Seesterne, Seeigel und eine Checkliste für deine Wasserwerte) . Und das Beste im Hörbuch selbst wartet noch eine Überraschung auf dich. Hier kannst du das Hörbuch jetzt zum Sonderpreis herunterladen >>>>> Hörbuch oder kopiere dir den folgenden Link: https://bit.ly/2FGAGKT Mein Buch - Meerwasseraquarium bauen und arbeiten wie die Profis -: Hier findest du mein Buch den Amazon-Bestseller: "Meerwasseraquarium - Aquarium bauen und Pflegen wie die Profis" Buch hier bestellen >>>> https://amzn.to/2UspYiY Hier geht´s zum Meerwasser-BLOG: hier klicken Folge mir auf Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/aquarium_west_gmbh/
Das Thema mit dem wir uns diese Woche beschäftigen entwickelt sich schleichend und ist deshalb Anfangs oft gar nicht so leicht zu bemerken. Erst wenn die ersten negativen Veränderungen in deinem Becken auftreten und du dich auf die Suche nach möglichen Ursachen begibst, kommst du wahrscheinlich irgendwann darauf. Ich spreche von einer ständig nachlassender Leistung von Strömungspumpen. Dadurch dass dieser Prozess sehr schleichend von sich geht, ist er besonders dann, wenn du jeden Tag dein Meerwasseraquarium beobachtest, schwer zu erkennen, da du dich automatisch an die immer schwächer werdende Strömung gewöhnst. Wenn man es genau nimmt, lässt die Strömung ab dem Zeitpunkt, an dem du die Strömungspumpe das erste Mal verwendest langsam aber sicher in der Leistung nach. Dafür gibt es mehrere Gründe. Der erste ist die Verschmutzung bzw. Verstopfung der Ansauggitter durch Algen, Schnecken usw.. Dieses Thema ist relativ leicht zu beheben, indem du einfach einmal pro Woche mit einer Zahnbürste die Ansauggitter reinigst und von Algen, Schnecken usw. befreist. Wir machen das bei unseren Wartungskunden so, dass wir die Strömungspumpen laufen lassen und mit der Bürste alles entfernen, was die Strömungsleistung reduzieren könnte. In schwereren Fällen in denen sich die Beläge nicht mehr richtig lösen lassen stecken wir die Pumoe aus, bauen das Ansauggitter weg und reinigen s dann außerhalb des Aquariums, da dort mehr Druck mit der Bürste aufgebaut werden kann, als wenn die Strömungspumpe noch am Magnet im Aquarium hängt. Ein weiterer Punkt der zu einer deutlichen Reduzierung der Strömungsleistung führt sind verschmutzte Antriebseinheiten. D.h. dass das Flügelrad inkl. dem Magneten und die Lauffläche der ............ Viel Spaß beim Anhören dieser neuen Folge! Mein Pflegemittel-Onlineshop: Kennst du meine Profi-Pflegemittel für Meerwasseraquarien? Als treuer Podcasthörer erhälst du einen Sonderrabatt von 10% in unserem Onlineshop www.aquacura.de. Sichere dir jetzt einen Sonderrabatt von 10% auf deinen gesamten Warenkorb im Aqua Cura Shop. Rabattcode: 10 www.aquacura.de Dort findest Du die besten Wasserwasseraquaristik-Pflegemittel, die wir auch bei allen unseren Kunden in über 2000 Aquarienwartungen verwenden. Wenn du dich für eines der bereits mit 10% rabattierten Sparpakete wie zum Beispiel eine hochwirksame Calciumlösung und eine Lösung zur Stabilisierung der Karbonathärte entscheidest sparst du mit dem Rabattcode 10 satte 20% . Alle Produkte bei uns im Shop bestehen aus den hochwertigsten Rohstoffen und wurden langen Praxistests vor der Markteinführung unterzogen.. Gehe auf www.aquacura.de und sichere dir jetzt deinen Rabatt. Hierfür muss du nur im Warenkorb im Rabattfeld die Zahl 10 eingeben. Rabattcode: 10 Profi-Beratung durch Markus Mahl: Da brauchst Hilfe bei einem Problem mit deinem Meerwasseraquarium? Hier kannst du die Beratung buchen: >>>>> Beratung durch Markus Mahl kostenlose Checklisten für dein Meerwasseraquarium : Hier findest du die kostenlose Checklisten für dein Meerwasseraquarium: https://aktion.aquacura.de/Geschenk Die Dosierung von Spurenelementen wird sehr kontrovers unter Meerwasseraquarianern diskutiert. Die einen geben regelmäßigen Spurenelementpräparate zu und freuen sich über das gesunde Wachstum ihrer Korallen, während andere keinerlei Spurenelemente zugeben und die Korallen trotzdem wachsen. Dann gibt es noch die dritte Gruppe, für die nach der Zugabe von Spurenelementen richtige Problem mit ihrem Becken bekommen. Doch was sind eigentlich Spurenelemente? Spurenelemente sind Elemente, die im natürlichen Meerwasser in äußerst geringen Konzentrationen vorkommen. Das bedeutet, alle Elemente deren Konzentration unter 1 mg/l liegt. Elemente im Bereich von 1-10 mg/l werden als Makroelemente bezeichnet. In der Meerwasseraquaristik wird hier eine kleine Ausnahme gemacht, da auch Elemente mit einer höheren Konzentration kleiner 1 mg/ l wie z.B. Strontium in Spurenelementlösungen enthalten sind. Im natürlichen Meerwasser sind mehr als 70 Mikro- und Makroelemente enthalten................... Hörbuch-Meerwasseraquarium: Erfahre alles war für ein Meerwasseraquarum wichtig ist in meinem Hörbuch "Meerwasseraquarium - Aquarium bauen und Pflegen wie die Profis" Du kannst dir das Hörbuch sofort herunterladen und anhören wann und wo immer du möchtest. Grundlage für das Hörbuch ist mein Buch: Amazon-Bestseller: "Meerwasseraquarium - Aquarium bauen und pflegen wie die Profis" Neben dem Hörbuch erhälst du noch 4 PDFs zum Downloads: Zudem einem Profi-Pflegeplan, einem 37 Seiten bebilderter Tierteil (Meerwasserfische, Korallen, Muscheln, Garnelen, Seesterne, Seeigel und eine Checkliste für deine Wasserwerte) . Und das Beste im Hörbuch selbst wartet noch eine Überraschung auf dich. Hier kannst du das Hörbuch jetzt zum Sonderpreis herunterladen >>>>> Hörbuch oder kopiere dir den folgenden Link: https://bit.ly/2FGAGKT Mein Buch - Meerwasseraquarium bauen und arbeiten wie die Profis -: Hier findest du mein Buch den Amazon-Bestseller: "Meerwasseraquarium - Aquarium bauen und Pflegen wie die Profis" Buch hier bestellen >>>> https://amzn.to/2UspYiY Hier geht´s zum Meerwasser-BLOG: hier klicken Folge mir auf Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/aquarium_west_gmbh/
Die Dosierung von Spurenelementen wird sehr kontrovers unter Meerwasseraquarianern diskutiert. Die einen geben regelmäßigen Spurenelementpräparate zu und freuen sich über das gesunde Wachstum ihrer Korallen, während andere keinerlei Spurenelemente zugeben und die Korallen trotzdem wachsen. Dann gibt es noch die dritte Gruppe, für die nach der Zugabe von Spurenelementen richtige Problem mit ihrem Becken bekommen. Doch was sind eigentlich Spurenelemente? Spurenelemente sind Elemente, die im natürlichen Meerwasser in äußerst geringen Konzentrationen vorkommen. Das bedeutet, alle Elemente deren Konzentration unter 1 mg/l liegt. Elemente im Bereich von 1-10 mg/l werden als Makroelemente bezeichnet. In der Meerwasseraquaristik wird hier eine kleine Ausnahme gemacht, da auch Elemente mit einer höheren Konzentration kleiner 1 mg/ l wie z.B. Strontium in Spurenelementlösungen enthalten sind. Im natürlichen Meerwasser sind mehr als 70 Mikro- und Makroelemente enthalten......... Hier findest du den Aqua Cura Spurenelemente-Vollkomplex >> Aqua Cura Spurenelemente-Vollkomplex ansehen Viel Spaß beim Anhören dieser neuen Folge! Mein Pflegemittel-Onlineshop: Kennst du meine Profi-Pflegemittel für Meerwasseraquarien? Als treuer Podcasthörer erhälst du einen Sonderrabatt von 10% in unserem Onlineshop www.aquacura.de. Sichere dir jetzt einen Sonderrabatt von 10% auf deinen gesamten Warenkorb im Aqua Cura Shop. Rabattcode: 10 www.aquacura.de Dort findest Du die besten Wasserwasseraquaristik-Pflegemittel, die wir auch bei allen unseren Kunden in über 2000 Aquarienwartungen verwenden. Wenn du dich für eines der bereits mit 10% rabattierten Sparpakete wie zum Beispiel eine hochwirksame Calciumlösung und eine Lösung zur Stabilisierung der Karbonathärte entscheidest sparst du mit dem Rabattcode 10 satte 20% . Alle Produkte bei uns im Shop bestehen aus den hochwertigsten Rohstoffen und wurden langen Praxistests vor der Markteinführung unterzogen.. Gehe auf www.aquacura.de und sichere dir jetzt deinen Rabatt. Hierfür muss du nur im Warenkorb im Rabattfeld die Zahl 10 eingeben. Rabattcode: 10 Profi-Beratung durch Markus Mahl: Da brauchst Hilfe bei einem Problem mit deinem Meerwasseraquarium? Hier kannst du die Beratung buchen: >>>>> Beratung durch Markus Mahl kostenlose Checklisten für dein Meerwasseraquarium : Hier findest du die kostenlose Checklisten für dein Meerwasseraquarium: https://aktion.aquacura.de/Geschenk Die Dosierung von Spurenelementen wird sehr kontrovers unter Meerwasseraquarianern diskutiert. Die einen geben regelmäßigen Spurenelementpräparate zu und freuen sich über das gesunde Wachstum ihrer Korallen, während andere keinerlei Spurenelemente zugeben und die Korallen trotzdem wachsen. Dann gibt es noch die dritte Gruppe, für die nach der Zugabe von Spurenelementen richtige Problem mit ihrem Becken bekommen. Doch was sind eigentlich Spurenelemente? Spurenelemente sind Elemente, die im natürlichen Meerwasser in äußerst geringen Konzentrationen vorkommen. Das bedeutet, alle Elemente deren Konzentration unter 1 mg/l liegt. Elemente im Bereich von 1-10 mg/l werden als Makroelemente bezeichnet. In der Meerwasseraquaristik wird hier eine kleine Ausnahme gemacht, da auch Elemente mit einer höheren Konzentration kleiner 1 mg/ l wie z.B. Strontium in Spurenelementlösungen enthalten sind. Im natürlichen Meerwasser sind mehr als 70 Mikro- und Makroelemente enthalten................... Hörbuch-Meerwasseraquarium: Erfahre alles war für ein Meerwasseraquarum wichtig ist in meinem Hörbuch "Meerwasseraquarium - Aquarium bauen und Pflegen wie die Profis" Du kannst dir das Hörbuch sofort herunterladen und anhören wann und wo immer du möchtest. Grundlage für das Hörbuch ist mein Buch: Amazon-Bestseller: "Meerwasseraquarium - Aquarium bauen und pflegen wie die Profis" Neben dem Hörbuch erhälst du noch 4 PDFs zum Downloads: Zudem einem Profi-Pflegeplan, einem 37 Seiten bebilderter Tierteil (Meerwasserfische, Korallen, Muscheln, Garnelen, Seesterne, Seeigel und eine Checkliste für deine Wasserwerte) . Und das Beste im Hörbuch selbst wartet noch eine Überraschung auf dich. Hier kannst du das Hörbuch jetzt zum Sonderpreis herunterladen >>>>> Hörbuch oder kopiere dir den folgenden Link: https://bit.ly/2FGAGKT Mein Buch - Meerwasseraquarium bauen und arbeiten wie die Profis -: Hier findest du mein Buch den Amazon-Bestseller: "Meerwasseraquarium - Aquarium bauen und Pflegen wie die Profis" Buch hier bestellen >>>> https://amzn.to/2UspYiY Hier geht´s zum Meerwasser-BLOG: hier klicken Folge mir auf Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/aquarium_west_gmbh/
Q BioMed Inc CEO Denis Corin caught up with Proactive to share a recap of the biotech group's 2021 achievements, including progress with its drug Strontium-89, including its financial performance, with 2021 year-over-year revenue increasing by 600% . What's more, Corin expanded on progress the group expects from its the remainder of its pipeline in 2022 as well as its expected uplist to the Nasdaq.
Violet Gems. December birthstones. Strontium Titanate. How to work metal clay with a butane torch. Mining with cosmic rays. Montana Sheridan gold mining District. Gemstones and Jewlery found on top of the alps. Was it really illegal to own gold in the United States? Chrome Driopside. Dino news and so much more come check us out on social media just look up radicalrocks you'll find us on me we Facebook parlor in YouTube. Thanks until next time remember rockhounds don't die they petrify.
Matt Ginder-Vogel and Amy Plechacek with the University of Wisconsin-Madison are studying how interactions between water and rock in Fond du Lac County might result in natural contamination of public and private drinking water wells.
Matt Ginder-Vogel and Amy Plechacek with the University of Wisconsin-Madison are studying how interactions between water and rock in Fond du Lac County might result in natural contamination of public and private drinking water wells.
Tune into our latest episode featuring Megan Reich, a Ph.D. Candidate in Biology at the University of Ottawa. Megan traveled 20,000 km to collect milkweed and create an isoscape of the Monarch butterfly's annual migration journey. In this episode, Megan explains the specific role Strontium isotopes play in the ecological conservation efforts of Monarch butterflies. Learn more: https://www.saivelab.com/
•••SEASON 1 Finale ••• GSTT Episode #12 Gorgonians - Let's take a deep dive and get our feet wet as we take a look at Gorgonians and some of their features and characteristics. Have an idea for or would like to participate in a future episode please reach out via our Facebook page, Messenger or email @ GettinSaltyTankTalkOfficial@yahoo.com Care Level - Expert Only Temperament- Peaceful Color forms - Red, Yellow, Purple, Black, Orange Origin - Caribbean Family - Anthothelidae Lighting - Med/Low Supplements- Calcium, Strontium, Iodine andTrace Elements Waterflow - Medium to Strong Placement - All Water Conditions - Temp 72-78° F dKH 8-12 pH 8.1-8.4 sg 1.023-1.025 Arizona Reef and Frag Group - https://www.facebook.com/groups/azreefandfraggroup/permalink/1195882887139882/ Tidal Gardens - https://youtu.be/ay9TQht4sQY What The Frag - https://youtu.be/1kYxAZ9JTi8
KSQD 8-18-2021: Time-restrictive eating addresses the fact that food is pro-inflammatory! From basic nerve cell physiology to the complex world of cannabinoids in the brain; The role of histamine as a neurotransmitter that affects serotonin levels and depression; Loss of memory and other brain effects with Parkinson's disease may be temporary; More about the how strontium fools us with better DEXA scores but not better bone strength; Review of COVID-19 infection and vaccination rates in Israel compared to the U.S.; The very strange autoimmune disease called Lichen Sclerosus; Research supports using diabetes drugs to reduce risk of Alzheimer's disease; Lack of sleep increases risks for dementia; Is tinnitus a side effect after getting a COVID-19 vaccine? Experiment in mice used cerium nanoparticles to reverse baldness
KSQD 8-18-2021: Time-restrictive eating addresses the fact that food is pro-inflammatory! From basic nerve cell physiology to the complex world of cannabinoids in the brain; The role of histamine as a neurotransmitter that affects serotonin levels and depression; Loss of memory and other brain effects with Parkinson's disease may be temporary; More about the how strontium fools us with better DEXA scores but not better bone strength; Review of COVID-19 infection and vaccination rates in Israel compared to the U.S.; The very strange autoimmune disease called Lichen Sclerosus; Research supports using diabetes drugs to reduce risk of Alzheimer's disease; Lack of sleep increases risks for dementia; Is tinnitus a side effect after getting a COVID-19 vaccine? Experiment in mice used cerium nanoparticles to reverse baldness
GSTT Episode #8 The Doughnut Coral- Let's take a deep dive and get our feet wet as we take a look at The Doughnut Coral and some of its features and characteristics. Joe Fish @FB - https://www.facebook.com/100008041689096/posts/2544840145794017/?d=n Arizona Reef and Frag Group - https://www.facebook.com/groups/azreefandfraggroup/permalink/708564989205010/ David Hammontree @FB - https://www.facebook.com/photo.php?fbid=871037832935324&set=a.159563407416107&type=3 REEF2REEF Show Off Thread @FB - https://www.facebook.com/REEF2REEF/photos/a.400682809805/10152211402729806/?type=3 Husbandry requirements- Care Level: Moderate Temperament: Aggressive (only to immediate neighbors) Lighting: Moderate Waterflow: Medium Water Conditions: 74-80° F dKH 8-12 pH 8.1-8.4 sg 1.023-1.025 Max. Size: 8" Common Color Forms: Purple, Red, Orange, Green and Pink Supplements (see below): Iodine, Calcium, Strontium and Trace Elements Common Origin: Central Indo-Pacific Ocean, the Red Sea and Australia. Family: Mussidae Species: Acanthophyllia deshayesiana (previously Scolymia vitiensis, then Cynarina deshayesiana)
KSQD 8-04-2021: The importance of histamine in physiology; The evolution of sensing chemicals in the environment, culminating in the sense of smell; The critical role of CoQ10 for our energy production, especially if you are taking statins; Is strontium good for bone health or not? Using an incentive spirometer device to improve health; Ivermectin is contraindicated for a pregnant woman with COVID-19; Eating frozen fish oil capsules can avoid fish oil breath; New test to detect risk of placenta accreta, a risk for maternal death after childbirth; Statins improve survival in triple negative breast cancer patients; Chemical tagging of cancer cells during surgery allow a more careful approach to removing tumors; The amazing collagen molecule; Robot assistance redefines physical therapy after a stroke
KSQD 8-04-2021: The importance of histamine in physiology; The evolution of sensing chemicals in the environment, culminating in the sense of smell; The critical role of CoQ10 for our energy production, especially if you are taking statins; Is strontium good for bone health or not? Using an incentive spirometer device to improve health; Ivermectin is contraindicated for a pregnant woman with COVID-19; Eating frozen fish oil capsules can avoid fish oil breath; New test to detect risk of placenta accreta, a risk for maternal death after childbirth; Statins improve survival in triple negative breast cancer patients; Chemical tagging of cancer cells during surgery allow a more careful approach to removing tumors; The amazing collagen molecule; Robot assistance redefines physical therapy after a stroke
This week, we are going clinical with Dr. Tom Guilliams. This is a new podcast segment that we're doing called Controversies in Nutrition, and in each session we are going to take some big controversies that have been brought to us by listeners and ask Dr. Tom Guilliams about them.
GSTT Episode #2 Acan Lords Let's take a deep dive and get our feet wet as we take a look at Acans and some of their features and characteristics. Care Level: Easy Temperament: Semi-aggressive Family: Mussidae Temperature: about 76°-80° F dKH 8-12 pH 8.1-8.4 sg 1.023-1.025 Color Form: Assorted Origin: Indonesia, SouthAtlantic & Caribbean, Malaysia, Vietnam, Australia, New Zealand and so many more places around the world. Lighting: Moderate Supplements: Calcium, Magnesium, Strontium, Iodine, Trace Elements Waterflow: Medium Placement: All Follow up links: -ARFG- http://youtu.be/0CfbrK3BSmQ -Brock Leonard- https://youtu.be/aSk_tyadb-I -TidalGardens- http://youtu.be/GsfBjsPavJw -Esben Sebastian- http://youtu.be/vtexXYf4ocE Next weeks episode should be released as usual on Friday morning for everyone and will be about the Desjardini Sailfin Tang (Zebrasoma desjardini).
GSTT Episode #1 Zoanthids Let's take a deep dive and get our feet wet as we take a look at Zoanthids and some of their features and characteristics. Order: Zoantharia Subclass: Hexacorallia Class: Anthozoa Kingdom: Animalia Phylum: Cnidaria Family: Parazoanthidae Temperature: about 76°-80° F Care Level: Easy Temperament: Semi-aggressive Color Form: Assorted Origin: Indonesia, SouthAtlantic & Caribbean, Malaysia, Vietnam, Australia, New Zealand and so many more places around the world. Lighting: Moderate Supplements: Calcium, Magnesium, Strontium, Iodine, Trace Elements Waterflow: Medium Placement: All Follow up links: https://www.pinterest.com/pin/36732553197818042/ https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Palythoa https://www.saltyunderground.com/article/38-identifying-zoanthus-palythoa-and-protopalythoa (not related to GSTT). Next weeks episode should be released on Friday for everyone and will be about Acanthastrea Lordhowensis (Acan Lords).
Please support our sponsors! Paranoramal Contractors: For Things that Go Bump in the Night 1-866-724-0800/paranormalcontractors@gmail.com Life Change Tea from Get The Tea dot Com. Use the codeword 'Unlimited' and your first order is shipped for free! Richard speaks with an author, lecturer, broadcaster who warns we are all being targeted by an insidious worldwide geo-engineering program. Is it a depopulation plot disguised as climate intervention? GUEST: Ronnie McMullen has been an on-air personality for over eleven years. He has always picked subjects that are not necessarily covered by mainstream media. He is the author of The Journey Into Reflection, He's passionate about finding natural organic ways to improve our well being. He's the CEO of Get the Tea dot Com and he's dedicated to restoring america's health, one tea bag at a time.
Advanced Beneficiary Notice for Practice Managmenet Strontium for the ABPM Boards