From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #11849 Reply-To: ammf@fruvous.com Sender: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Errors-To: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org Precedence: bulk alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest Saturday, July 29 2023 Volume 14 : Number 11849 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Donāt Feed This To Your Dog (Will Cut His Life Short By 30%) ["Your Dog" ] Leave your feedback and you could WIN! ["McDonald's Opinion Requested" Subject: Donāt Feed This To Your Dog (Will Cut His Life Short By 30%) Donbt Feed This To Your Dog (Will Cut His Life Short By 30%) http://brainc13.shop/Sbh8by6WtcWa4A2S97cJbo5UmD8qI3HP586X_4mNCPdUmku4Ow http://brainc13.shop/TTPLMt7uP98OuQ5sBmiUEb-LjOAG_dOiv09jhW_6dQploGpEkQ As naval mines have become more sophisticated, and able to discriminate between targets, so they have become more difficult to deal with by conventional sweeping. This has given rise to the practice of minehunting. Minehunting is very different from sweeping, although some minehunters can do both tasks. Minehunting pays little attention to the nature of the mine itself. Nor does the method change much. At the current state of the art, minehunting remains the best way to deal with influence mines proving to be both safer and more effective than sweeping. Specialized high-frequency sonars and high fidelity sidescaning sonar are used for mine location.:?18? Mines are hunted using sonar, then inspected and destroyed either by divers or ROVs (remote controlled unmanned mini-submarines). It is slow, but also the most reliable way to remove mines. Minehunting started during the Second World War, but it was only after the war that it became truly effective. Sea mammals (mainly the bottlenose dolphin) have been trained to hunt and mark mines, most famously by the U.S. Navy Marine Mammal Program. Mine-clearance dolphins were deployed in the Persian Gulf during the Iraq War in 2003. The US Navy claims that these dolphins were effective in helping to clear more than 100 antiship mines and underwater booby traps from Umm Qasr Port. French naval officer Jacques Yves Cousteau's Undersea Research Group was once involved in minehunting operations: They removed or detonated a variety of German mines, but one particularly defusion-resistant batchbequipped with acutely sensitive pressure, magnetic, and acoustic sensors and wired together so that one explosion would trigger the restbwas simply left undisturbed for years until corrosion would (hopefully) disable the mines ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2023 11:51:28 +0200 From: "McDonald's Opinion Requested" Subject: Leave your feedback and you could WIN! Leave your feedback and you could WIN! http://neurodinep.shop/2KJdwlXV4_j_jT0unMiwXyHJLLAxnIs87vmbPDCkg-SAqfaLmg http://neurodinep.shop/7TU1qFJ5g56O9_5Ydklmnt7-BxUtWuMGf6uvrsxOV1CqT-hVfA Mines can be laid in many ways: by purpose-built minelayers, refitted ships, submarines, or aircraftband even by dropping them into a harbour by hand. They can be inexpensive: some variants can cost as little as US$2,000, though more sophisticated mines can cost millions of dollars, be equipped with several kinds of sensors, and deliver a warhead by rocket or torpedo. British Mk 14 sea mine Their flexibility and cost-effectiveness make mines attractive to the less powerful belligerent in asymmetric warfare. The cost of producing and laying a mine is usually between 0.5% and 10% of the cost of removing it, and it can take up to 200 times as long to clear a minefield as to lay it. Parts of some World War II naval minefields still exist because they are too extensive and expensive to clear. Some 1940s-era mines may remain dangerous for many years. Mines have been employed as offensive or defensive weapons in rivers, lakes, estuaries, seas, and oceans, but they can also be used as tools of psychological warfare. Offensive mines are placed in enemy waters, outside harbours, and across important shipping routes to sink both merchant and military vessels. Defensive minefields safeguard key stretches of coast from enemy ships and submarines, forcing them into more easily defended areas, or keeping them away from sensitive ones. Shipowners are reluctant to send their ships through known minefields. Port authorities may attempt to clear a mined area, but those without effective minesweeping equipment may cease using the area. Transit of a mined area will be attempted only when strategic interests outweigh potential losses. The decision-makers' perception of the minefield is a critical factor. Minefields designed for psychological effect are usually placed on trade routes to stop ships from reaching an enemy nation. They are often spread thinly, to create an impression of minefields existing across large areas. A single mine inserted strategically on a shipping route can stop maritime movements for days while the entire area is swept. A mine's capability to sink ships makes it a credible threat, but minefields work more on the mind than on ships. International law, specifically the Eighth Hague Convention of 1907, requires nations to declare when they mine an area, to make it easier for civil shipping to avoid the mines. The warnings do not have to be specific; for example, during World War II, Britain declared simply that it had mined the English Channel, North Sea and French coas ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2023 11:15:45 +0000 From: "Circa Knee Compression Sleeve" Subject: Advanced Knee Sleeves Provide Fast Relief at Any Age [IMAGE] Get Rid Of Your Knee Pain For Good! CaresoleCaresole Caresole “After hurting my knee in a car accident in my 30’s, my knees have never been the same. Now I am able to play with my? ?grandchildren” –LISA M. Caresole If you does't like this, please Click here 1731 Pooz Street Manasquan, NJ 07719 [IMAGE] ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 28 Jul 2023 14:03:35 +0200 From: "BuzzPatch" Subject: Changed with you and your kids in mind Changed with you and your kids in mind http://jointrestoregummesx.shop/5ofHoEMMVdmKt-K2RNzaWtlgciWnf9kjALazKPac0zYSFASohg http://jointrestoregummesx.shop/x8p2V3TCjLlPujLMSedsuNZHDIDsJESax2EhJzY_phSXMVCRSA Many birds, particularly seabirds, nest in dense communities but are nonetheless territorial in defending their nesting site to within the distance they can reach while brooding. This is necessary to prevent attacks on their own chicks or nesting material from neighbours. Commonly the resulting superimposition of the short-range repulsion onto the long-range attraction characteristically leads to the well-known roughly hexagonal spacing of nests. One gets a similar hexagonal spacing resulting from the territorial behaviour of gardening limpets such as species of Scutellastra. They vigorously defend their gardens of particular species of algae, that extend for perhaps 1b2 cm around the periphery of their shells. The desert grass spider, Agelenopsis aperta, often engages in fights over its territory and the most combative spiders have the largest territories. Some species of penguin defend their nests from intruders trying to steal the pebbles from which the nest is constructed. Mating opportunities: The striped mouse (Rhabdomys pumilio) is group living with one single breeding male and up to 4 communally breeding females per group. Groups typically contain several philopatric adult sons (and daughters) that are believed not to breed in their natal group and all group members participate in territorial defence. Males defend their territory using a nasty neignbour strategy. Group-living male breeders are nearly five times more aggressive towards their neighbours than towards strangers, leading to the prediction that neighbours are the most important competitors for paternity. Using a molecular parentage analysis it has been shown that 28% of offspring are sired by neighbouring males and only 7% by strangers. In certain species of butterflies, such as the Australian painted lady butterfly and the speckled wood butterfly, the male defends territories that receptive females are likely to fly through such as sunny hilltops and sunspots on a forest's floor. Territory defence in male variegated pupfish (Cyprinodon variegatus) is dependent on the presence of females. Reduced aggression consistent with the dear enemy effect occurs between conspecific neighbours in the absence of females, but the presence of a female in a male's territory instigates comparably greater aggression between the neighbours. In the Skylark (Alauda arvensis), playbacks of neighbour and stranger songs at three periods of the breeding season show that neighbours are dear enemies in the middle of the season, when territories are stable, but not at the beginning of the breeding season, during settlement and pair formation, nor at the end, when bird density increases due to the presence of young birds becoming independent. Thus, this dear enemy territoriality relationship is not a fixed pattern but a flexible one likely to evolve with social and ecological circumstances ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 29 Jul 2023 12:15:48 +0200 From: "Bosch Mitre Saw Department" Subject: Your package could not be delivered. Your package could not be delivered. http://instanttranslat.shop/ct_BySQbuUEI07zbd-kcBXfwsH6waOE92lok8CQPc-7_Vu76YA http://instanttranslat.shop/dxULYfr8OlqxpMMgTpMSCQs8mAw_n9axDZ5xXOVLtANFCJo Mines can be laid in many ways: by purpose-built minelayers, refitted ships, submarines, or aircraftband even by dropping them into a harbour by hand. They can be inexpensive: some variants can cost as little as US$2,000, though more sophisticated mines can cost millions of dollars, be equipped with several kinds of sensors, and deliver a warhead by rocket or torpedo. British Mk 14 sea mine Their flexibility and cost-effectiveness make mines attractive to the less powerful belligerent in asymmetric warfare. The cost of producing and laying a mine is usually between 0.5% and 10% of the cost of removing it, and it can take up to 200 times as long to clear a minefield as to lay it. Parts of some World War II naval minefields still exist because they are too extensive and expensive to clear. Some 1940s-era mines may remain dangerous for many years. Mines have been employed as offensive or defensive weapons in rivers, lakes, estuaries, seas, and oceans, but they can also be used as tools of psychological warfare. Offensive mines are placed in enemy waters, outside harbours, and across important shipping routes to sink both merchant and military vessels. Defensive minefields safeguard key stretches of coast from enemy ships and submarines, forcing them into more easily defended areas, or keeping them away from sensitive ones. Shipowners are reluctant to send their ships through known minefields. Port authorities may attempt to clear a mined area, but those without effective minesweeping equipment may cease using the area. Transit of a mined area will be attempted only when strategic interests outweigh potential losses. The decision-makers' perception of the minefield is a critical factor. Minefields designed for psychological effect are usually placed on trade routes to stop ships from reaching an enemy nation. They are often spread thinly, to create an impression of minefields existing across large areas. A single mine inserted strategically on a shipping route can stop maritime movements for days while the entire area is swept. A mine's capability to sink ships makes it a credible threat, but minefields work more on the mind than on ship ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #11849 ***********************************************