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originally posted by: PurpleFox
originally posted by: carewemust
a reply to: Flesh699
Anyone ever determine if this is a casket?
twitter.com...
Im going with stacked plywood. Ive moved plenty of it in the past, looks like it to me.
Reports: Dominion Machines Breaking Down in Several Georgia GOP Precincts; Voters Told Workers Will Scan Ballots Later
originally posted by: pteridine
originally posted by: RelSciHistItSufi
a reply to: cherokeetroy
Ignore the defeatists and keep moving forward.
originally posted by: angelchemuel
Well this doesn't sound good! Checked it out and being reported in Indian press etc too!
Xi Jinping orders millitary to be ready for war at any moment
Published today.
Rainbows
Jane
What we found is that this one master gene comes on...and that's activating genes that are turning on during regeneration," Gehrke said. "Basically, what's going on is the non-coding regions are telling the coding regions to turn on or off, so a good way to think of it is as though they are switches."
t turns out that Egr, the master gene, and the other genes that are being turned on and off downstream are present in other species, including humans," Gehrke said.
But the question is: If humans can turn on Egr, and not only turn it on, but do it when our cells are injured, why can't we regenerate?" Srivastava said. "The answer may be that if EGR is the power switch, we think the wiring is different. What EGR is talking to in human cells may be different than what it is talking to in the three-banded panther worm, and what Andrew has done with this study is come up with a way to get at this wiring. So we want to figure out what those connections are, and then apply that to other animals, including vertebrates that can only do more limited regeneration."
Scientists have found that humans and sharks share the same gene network that allow sharks to regrow their teeth. We could have the ability to regrow our teeth if we can find a way to switch these genes on. These genes in people die off or break down after our milk teeth and our adult teeth grow. There is a possibility we can re-invigorate them with future dental therapies. This could change dentistry forever. Since we have the same genes to make teeth, we also have a regenerative program. The study was done by researchers from the Department of Animal and Plant Sciences from the University of Sheffields, led by Gareth Fraser.
originally posted by: cherokeetroy
I'm not sure about this secret tech that involves blood transfusion or being submerged in a liquid. That sounds pretty invasive. I would opt for noninvasive procedures that work with tge electromagnetic field
originally posted by: PokeyJoe
a reply to: carewemust
False alarm - turns out Stacy Abrams just tried to flush a McDonalds Filet-o-Fish down the toilet. Again.