From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #4785 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 Sunday, August 16 2020 Volume 14 : Number 4785 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Secret Mineral Can destroy Big Pharma and Big Food ["Dr. Evanās" Subject: Secret Mineral Can destroy Big Pharma and Big Food Secret Mineral Can destroy Big Pharma and Big Food http://prayermiracle.co/cwILda2XgP0te8LWK5lExxAO4RXlDAq0O6LAYl1BS3vIo82i http://prayermiracle.co/WDIvj7R-KHxuMMmP3BuEdMWf2NLl0x4BtknN92DPKpVcbXvY etry show a repeating pattern around a central axis such that they can be separated into several identical pieces when cut through the central point, much like pieces of a pie. Typically, this involves repeating a body part 4, 5, 6 or 8 times around the axis b referred to as tetramerism, pentamerism, hexamerism and octomerism, respectively. Such organisms exhibits no left or right sides but do have a top and a bottom surface, or a front and a back. George Cuvier classified animals with radial symmetry in the taxon Radiata (Zoophytes), which is now generally accepted to be an assemblage of different animal phyla that do not share a single common ancestor (a polyphyletic group). Most radially symmetric animals are symmetrical about an axis extending from the center of the oral surface, which contains the mouth, to the center of the opposite (aboral) end. Animals in the phyla Cnidaria and Echinodermata generally show radial symmety, although many sea anemones and some corals within the Cnidaria have bilateral symmetry defined by a single structure, the siphonoglyph. Radial symmetry is especially suitable for sessile animals such as the sea anemone, floating animals such as jellyfish, and slow moving organisms such as starfish; whereas bilateral symmetry favours locomotion by generating a streamlined body. Many flowers are also radially symmetric, or 'actinomorphic'. Roughly identical floral structures b petals, sepals, and stamens b occur at regular intervals around the axis of the flower, which is often the female reproductive organ containing the carpel, style and stigma. Lilium bulbiferum displays pentamerism with repeated parts arranged around the axis of the flower. Subtypes of radial symmetry Some jellyfish, such as Aurelia marginalis, show tetramerism with a four-fold radial symmetry. This is immediately obvious when looking at the jellyfish due to the presence of four gonads, visible through its translucent body. This radial symmetry is ecologically important in allowing the jellyfish to detect and respond to stimuli (mainly food and danger) from all directions. Alt text Apple cut horizontally showing that pentamerism also occurs in fruit Flowering plants show five-fold symmetry, or pentamerism, in many of their flowers and fruits. This is easily seen through the arrangement of five carpels (seed pockets) in an apple when cut transversely. Among animals, only the echinoderms such as sea stars, sea urchins, and sea lilies are pentamerous as adults, with five arms arranged around the mouth. Being bilaterian animals, however, they initially develop with mirror symmetry as larvae, then gain pentaradial symmetry later. Hexamerism is found in the corals and sea anemones (class Anthozoa) that are divided into two groups based on their symmetry. The most comm ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #4785 **********************************************