[NewCandle] Eat your isotopes, Jr.

Nick Reiter avalonbiker at yahoo.com
Fri Mar 30 05:57:13 EST 2007


Holy Moly!

What the...

OK, I see what happened.  Apologies to the group -
Yahoo was to blame.  Last night, when I went to reply
to Keith's isotope message, Yahoo gave me a "sorry we
can't send this, but we are working on the problem"
message window.  So I must have idly just tippy tapped
it a half dozen times or so to see when if it would
work again, but got the "we are down" message each
time.  They must have all been gong through, though,
despite the Yahoo error page.  Jeez, mein face ist
rot.

Sorry for the silliness, all.

N
--- Keith Nagel <NewCandleAdmin at ipdiscover.com> wrote:

> Woah, slow down there big fella, those isotopes are
> getting to you!
> 
> Why do I get the feeling that this study was brought
> to us by the good people at General Electric?
> 
> It strikes me that besides the foliation, the
> roll is in electrical contact with all parts of
> itself.
> 
> K.
> 
> -----Original Message-----
> From: newcandle-bounces at ipdiscover.com
> [mailto:newcandle-bounces at ipdiscover.com]On Behalf
> Of Nick Reiter
> Sent: Thursday, March 29, 2007 7:15 PM
> To: New energy for the new world.
> Subject: Re: [NewCandle] Eat your isotopes, Jr.
> 
> 
> YUM!  More Isotopes please!
> 
> Urrrrr.  Hm.  I'll opt for lots of fresh fruit,
> oatmeal, and blueberry juice.
> 
> Man oh man, rolled up foil is kicking loose-leaf's
> butt in the H2 bubble production race!
> 
> N
> 
> 
> --- Keith Nagel <NewCandleAdmin at ipdiscover.com>
> wrote:
> 
> >
>
http://www.livescience.com/humanbiology/070325_isotope_worms.html
> >
> > Experiments with worms suggest humans might one
> day
> > be able to eat themselves to a longer and
> healthier
> > life.
> >
> > The new approach differs from previous studies
> which
> > extended life in non-human animals by keeping food
> > consumption to a bare
> > minimum, a technique called caloric restriction.
> >
> > Researchers led by Mikhail Shchepinov, formerly of
> > Oxford University, fed nematode worms,
> > Caenorhabditis elegans, bits of steak and
> > chicken reinforced with variations of certain
> atoms,
> > called “isotopes,” of elements like hydrogen,
> > carbon, nitrogen and oxygen.
> >
> > Isotopes have the same number of protons as their
> > natural counterparts but different numbers of
> > neutrons. Carbon, for example,
> > usually has 6 protons and 6 neutrons. An isotope
> of
> > carbon, called C13, has 6 protons and 7 neutrons.
> >
> 
> 
> 
> 
>
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