From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #6193 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 Friday, March 19 2021 Volume 14 : Number 6193 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Itās important you claim your Free DVD today. ["Change Shooting Forever"<] CONGRATS! You Can Get $50 Costco Rewards ["Costco Shopper Gift Opportuni] Stream Full HD Digital Media on Your Television [" mobile screen cast" Subject: Itās important you claim your Free DVD today. Itbs important you claim your Free DVD today. http://smartspeech.buzz/HiE97wYpCyD_sKS3KXkYx12P7A2t50NCUbCss9qSmI7mWq06 http://smartspeech.buzz/iv6xczKCxauSAnmjYKETEIuNclq6z2oX2J-BG04WhQsF0H17 rder Gymnophiona (from the Greek gymnos meaning "naked" and ophis meaning "serpent") or Apoda comprises the caecilians. These are long, cylindrical, limbless animals with a snake- or worm-like form. The adults vary in length from 8 to 75 centimetres (3 to 30 inches) with the exception of Thomson's caecilian (Caecilia thompsoni), which can reach 150 centimetres (4.9 feet). A caecilian's skin has a large number of transverse folds and in some species contains tiny embedded dermal scales. It has rudimentary eyes covered in skin, which are probably limited to discerning differences in light intensity. It also has a pair of short tentacles near the eye that can be extended and which have tactile and olfactory functions. Most caecilians live underground in burrows in damp soil, in rotten wood and under plant debris, but some are aquatic. Most species lay their eggs underground and when the larvae hatch, they make their way to adjacent bodies of water. Others brood their eggs and the larvae undergo metamorphosis before the eggs hatch. A few species give birth to live young, nourishing them with glandular secretions while they are in the oviduct. Caecilians have a mostly Gondwanan distribution, being found in tropical regions of Africa, Asia and Central and South Ameri ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 19 Mar 2021 05:21:43 -0400 From: "Costco Shopper Gift Opportunity" Subject: CONGRATS! You Can Get $50 Costco Rewards CONGRATS! You Can Get $50 Costco Rewards http://diabetesfunds.buzz/r1kp7rauvs6THtxe8qxsyizeGQ8yhoQbNLc6S0ScmCF7M26P http://diabetesfunds.buzz/WuK6k1nwr8unVrMZ0Uqz-_S3s1zTMMFw5Ptrl58vf-XpPjCQ iversity of Washington is a light rail station situated on the University of Washington campus in Seattle, Washington, United States. The station is served by Sound Transit's Link light rail system and is the current northern terminus of Line 1, which runs south towards Capitol Hill station and Downtown Seattle. University of Washington station is at the intersection of Montlake Boulevard Northeast and Northeast Pacific Street, adjacent to Husky Stadium and the University of Washington Medical Center. The station consists of an underground island platform connected to a surface entrance by elevators and escalators. A pedestrian bridge over Montlake Boulevard connects the station to the University of Washington campus and the Burke-Gilman Trail. University of Washington station was built as part of the University Link Extension, which began construction in 2009 and opened on March 19, 2016. The Northgate Link Extension, expected to open in September 2021, will extend Line 1 service through the University District to Northgate. Light rail trains serve the station twenty hours a day on most days; the headway between trains is six minutes during peak periods with reduced frequency at other times. The station is served by a major bus hub; King County Metro and Sound Transit Express bus routes connect the University District to the Ea ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 19 Mar 2021 10:05:16 +0100 From: " mobile screen cast" Subject: Stream Full HD Digital Media on Your Television This email must be viewed in HTML mode. ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 19 Mar 2021 03:21:22 -0400 From: "Ebay Shopper Feedback" Subject: Congrats! You've Been Selected For $50 Ebay Reward Congrats! You've Been Selected For $50 Ebay Reward http://smartspeech.buzz/yPX8i-u1W-F3mdcyWYXRM7XOjamuEHPPGEv6ic9xnyeUrGG1 http://smartspeech.buzz/SoyPT_o6HAv9hUBjRDFSeW9X97-1RG8m1FMYKIapAfqgwNSe aper Mario: The Origami King is a 2020 cross-genre video game released exclusively for the Nintendo Switch console. Developed by Intelligent Systems and published by Nintendo, it is the sixth game in the Paper Mario series, part of the larger Mario franchise. The story follows Mario and his friends as he sets out on a journey to prevent the Mushroom Kingdom from being transformed into origami. To do so, Mario must free Princess Peach's castle from five decorative streamers that extend across the kingdom. The Origami King features cross-genre gameplay, blending elements of action-adventure, role-playing (RPG), and puzzle games. Controlling Mario, the player explores a large overworld and fights enemies in a turn-based style that uses a ring-based puzzle system. In combat, enemies are scattered on a circle stylized like a dartboard separated into four rings and additional columns. The player can rotate the rings horizontally and vertically to organize the enemies into patterns that result in being able to clear them quicker. The Origami King's development team emphasized innovation to a greater extent than previous games in the series. Anticipating an inability to satisfy every fan, Intelligent Systems gravitated towards creating entirely new concepts. Origami and confetti were used as new variants of paper-themed concepts. The developers changed the traditional linear gameplay to an open world format and used enemies uninvolved with the Mario franchise. Nintendo intended to announce at E3 2020 as part of the 35th anniversary of Super Mario Bros. (1985), but the game was revealed prior to the event. Be ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 19 Mar 2021 01:49:15 -0700 From: "Amazing Deals" Subject: Survey for a $50 Kohls reward. Participation Required. Survey for a $50 Kohls reward. Participation Required. http://landscapidea.buzz/wImig4QE2XynDEdy9Y7-jNW3cxzJ9gsRLfrBuyvW6GlJ6YEl http://landscapidea.buzz/ScGvdljxfVyDpJoONkPmx1ejfu73XMHV-BlEThbBbSe9WBTk order Cryptobranchoidea contains the primitive salamanders. A number of fossil cryptobranchids have been found, but there are only three living species, the Chinese giant salamander (Andrias davidianus), the Japanese giant salamander (Andrias japonicus) and the hellbender (Cryptobranchus alleganiensis) from North America. These large amphibians retain several larval characteristics in their adult state; gills slits are present and the eyes are unlidded. A unique feature is their ability to feed by suction, depressing either the left side of their lower jaw or the right. The males excavate nests, persuade females to lay their egg strings inside them, and guard them. As well as breathing with lungs, they respire through the many folds in their thin skin, which has capillaries close to the surface. The suborder Salamandroidea contains the advanced salamanders. They differ from the cryptobranchids by having fused prearticular bones in the lower jaw, and by using internal fertilisation. In salamandrids, the male deposits a bundle of sperm, the spermatophore, and the female picks it up and inserts it into her cloaca where the sperm is stored until the eggs are laid. The largest family in this group is Plethodontidae, the lungless salamanders, which includes 60% of all salamander species. The family Salamandridae includes the true salamanders and the name "newt" is given to members of its subfamily Pleurodelinae. The third suborder, Sirenoidea, contains the four species of sirens, which are in a single family, Sirenidae. Members of this order are eel-like aquatic salamanders with much reduced forelimbs and no hind limbs. Some of their features are primitive while others are derived. Fertilisation is likely to be external as sirenids lack the cloacal glands used by male salamandrids to produce spermatophores and the females lack sperma ------------------------------ Date: Fri, 19 Mar 2021 02:56:03 -0700 From: "Concealed Carry Shirt" Subject: The Comfortable Under-Shirt Thatās Better Than Traditional Holsters! The Comfortable Under-Shirt Thatbs Better Than Traditional Holsters! http://landscapidea.buzz/ZszuWBekVITFIOry9Y4bALsDF75d84tk4ZINjSM2GHGccN9F http://landscapidea.buzz/CLIp9spQDpvH4e8dP_lBZftoSY_LwLAYZFv5aD4yRuTBtPFY storically ranged from eastern Turkey and Transcaucasia to the coast of the Sea of Japan, and from South Asia across Southeast Asia to the Indonesian islands of Sumatra, Java and Bali. Since the end of the last glacial period, it was probably restricted by periods of deep snow lasting longer than six months. Currently, it occurs in less than 6% of its historical range, as it has been extirpated from Southwest and Central Asia, large parts of Southeast and East Asia. It now mainly occurs in the Indian subcontinent, the Indochinese Peninsula, Sumatra and the Russian Far East. In China and Myanmar, breeding populations appear to rely on immigration from neighbouring countries while its status in the Korean Peninsula is unknown. The tiger is essentially associated with forest habitats. Tiger populations thrive where populations of wild cervids, bovids and suids are stable. Records in Central Asia indicate that it occurred foremost in Tugay riverine forests along the Atrek, Amu Darya, Syr Darya, Hari, Chu and Ili Rivers and their tributaries. In the Caucasus, it inhabited hilly and lowland forests. Historical records in Iran are known only from the southern coast of the Caspian Sea and adjacent Alborz Mountains. In the Amur-Ussuri region, it inhabits Korean pine and temperate broadleaf and mixed forests, where riparian forests provide food and water, and serve as dispersal corridors for both tiger and ungulates. On the Indian subcontinent, it inhabits mainly tropical and subtropical moist broadleaf forests, moist evergreen forests, tropical dry forests and the swamp forests of the Sundarbans. In the Eastern Himalayas, tigers were documented in temperate forest up to an elevation of 4,200 m (13,800 ft) in Bhutan and of 3,630 m (11,910 ft) in the Mishmi Hills. In Thailand, it lives in deciduous and evergreen forests. In Laos, 14 tigers were documented in semi-evergreen and evergreen forest interspersed with gra ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 18 Mar 2021 13:21:43 +0100 From: "Simon Williams" Subject: robot for window cleaning Hi, Hope you are doing well today. We are reaching you today to let you know that we have got the following window cleaning robot, ready to ship worldwide. 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Thanks, Simon Williams ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 18 Mar 2021 05:56:32 -0400 From: "Verizon Reward Feedback" Subject: $50 Verizon reward. Participation Required $50 Verizon reward. Participation Required http://easymale.buzz/SR_s_SjtTnzIS24CMmxCwFPToMqAH_aApg1dFI-gkED0hqI http://easymale.buzz/9B5d3O0C_4Q3zAynajxe7G7TJ_NGWd81XqYRqGYxCi_pyQtp he Wells and Wellington affair is a name given to the events surrounding the publication of three papers in the Australian Journal of Herpetology in 1983 and 1985. The publication was established in 1981 as a peer-reviewed scientific journal focusing on the study of amphibians and reptiles (herpetology). Its first two issues were published under the editorship of Richard W. Wells, a first-year biology student at Australia's University of New England. Wells then ceased communicating with the journal's editorial board for two years before suddenly publishing three papers without peer review in the journal in 1983 and 1985. Coauthored by himself and high school teacher C. Ross Wellington, the papers reorganized the taxonomy of all of Australia's and New Zealand's amphibians and reptiles and proposed over 700 changes to the binomial nomenclature of the region's herpetofauna. Members of the herpetological community reacted strongly to the pair's actions and eventually brought a case to the International Commission on Zoological Nomenclature to suppress the scientific names they proposed. After four years of arguments, the commission opted not to vote on the case because it hinged largely on taxonomic arguments rather than nomenclatural ones, leaving some of Wells and Wellington's names available. The case's outcome highlighted the vulnerability to the established rules of biological nomenclature that desktop publishing presented. As of 2020, 24 of the specific names assigned by Wells and Wellington remained valid senior syn ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 18 Mar 2021 06:22:54 -0700 From: "Shed Plans Inside" Subject: How to build sheds like lego bricks... How to build sheds like lego bricks... http://mindplan.us/Ct_1s6edwFiJzTbmlNA3FeeyWQRiZ13l7LXWpXq_r5ulP8uR http://mindplan.us/FpWOxPGKVu-itcPICsue9sRi1Xm1vRa2xtjwl9U8NmYFnFg_ tronic publishing is a new area of information dissemination. One definition of electronic publishing is in the context of the scientific journal. It is the presentation of scholarly scientific results in only an electronic (non-paper) form. This is from its first write-up, or creation, to its publication or dissemination. The electronic scientific journal is specifically designed to be presented on the internet. It is defined as not being previously printed material adapted, or retooled, and then delivered electronically. Electronic publishing will likely continue to exist alongside paper publishing for the foreseeable future, since whilst output to a screen is important for browsing and searching, it is not well suited for extensive reading. Formats suitable both for reading on paper, and for manipulation by the reader's computer will need to be integrated. Many journals are electronically available in formats readable on screen via web browsers, as well as in portable document format PDF, suitable for printing and storing on a local desktop or laptop computer. New tools such as JATS and Utopia Documents provide a 'bridge' to the 'web-versions' in that they connect the content in PDF versions directly to the World Wide Web via hyperlinks that are created 'on-the-fly'. The PDF version of an article is usually seen as the version of rec ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 18 Mar 2021 10:08:44 -0400 From: "Ebook Creator" Subject: Ebooks in 60 Seconds! (WHOA) Ebooks in 60 Seconds! (WHOA) http://sqribblee.us/DkxxXZcDaqwpKRAZ9Iuvbd1QNKoEE-g0089BUm886-IJpSZG http://sqribblee.us/EX3akYBIfiOBLK5TKqfgGfAQJsrygOxWBS86daZvYFJsXMuB ditionally, the author of an article was required to transfer the copyright to the journal publisher. Publishers claimed this was necessary in order to protect authors' rights, and to coordinate permissions for reprints or other use. However, many authors, especially those active in the open access movement, found this unsatisfactory, and have used their influence to effect a gradual move towards a license to publish instead. Under such a system, the publisher has permission to edit, print, and distribute the article commercially, but the authors retain the other rights themselves. Even if they retain the copyright to an article, most journals allow certain rights to their authors. These rights usually include the ability to reuse parts of the paper in the author's future work, and allow the author to distribute a limited number of copies. In the print format, such copies are called reprints; in the electronic format, they are called postprints. Some publishers, for example the American Physical Society, also grant the author the right to post and update the article on the author's or employer's website and on free e-print servers, to grant permission to others to use or reuse figures, and even to reprint the article as long as no fee is charged. The rise of open access journals, in which the author retains the copyright but must pay a publi ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 18 Mar 2021 10:02:09 -0700 From: "Acid Reflux" Subject: How I Cured My Acid Reflux and Stage II Esophageal Cancer By Eliminating the Secret Real Cause How I Cured My Acid Reflux and Stage II Esophageal Cancer By Eliminating the Secret Real Cause http://licksnore.buzz/_08RxLQBVIvMlFSTpIoUhP0RsK9N5Y85OVDlSDp51_XlPQ82 http://licksnore.buzz/KxTy18d46yQYwFlSeOLDiyTzDksIrMBaisrPqkfZVcKN3iV1 he first major groups of amphibians developed in the Devonian period, around 370 million years ago, from lobe-finned fish which were similar to the modern coelacanth and lungfish. These ancient lobe-finned fish had evolved multi-jointed leg-like fins with digits that enabled them to crawl along the sea bottom. Some fish had developed primitive lungs that help them breathe air when the stagnant pools of the Devonian swamps were low in oxygen. They could also use their strong fins to hoist themselves out of the water and onto dry land if circumstances so required. Eventually, their bony fins would evolve into limbs and they would become the ancestors to all tetrapods, including modern amphibians, reptiles, birds, and mammals. Despite being able to crawl on land, many of these prehistoric tetrapodomorph fish still spent most of their time in the water. They had started to develop lungs, but still breathed predominantly with gills. Many examples of species showing transitional features have been discovered. Ichthyostega was one of the first primitive amphibians, with nostrils and more efficient lungs. It had four sturdy limbs, a neck, a tail with fins and a skull very similar to that of the lobe-finned fish, Eusthenopteron. Amphibians evolved adaptations that allowed them to stay out of the water for longer periods. Their lungs improved and their skeletons became heavier and stronger, better able to support the weight of their bodies on land. They developed "hands" and "feet" with five or more digits; the skin became more capable of retaining body fluids and resisting desiccation. The fish's hyomandibula bone in the hyoid region behind the gills diminished in size and became the stapes of the amphibian ear, an adaptation necessary for hearing on dry land. An affinity between the amphibians and the teleost fish is the multi-folded struct ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #6193 **********************************************