From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #9058 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 Tuesday, May 31 2022 Volume 14 : Number 9058 Today's Subjects: ----------------- Voice-Over Artists Just Got Worried ["Turn Text To Speech Software" ] The toxins leaving your body are what dye the patches to blackâ. ["Detox ] ---------------------------------------------------------------------- Date: Sat, 28 May 2022 10:39:50 -0400 From: "Turn Text To Speech Software" Subject: Voice-Over Artists Just Got Worried Voice-Over Artists Just Got Worried http://textspeech.rest/kPgHjbE-kvzEogX_9CmesfMy2aBwnveQGayGvLuVzzvRhi9jgQ http://textspeech.rest/8ksd1tVc69X2H4OVn6NeqdUhU8gdyrE-6BM_CCHUSbF2MBEdjg ost of the solid material in a plant is taken from the atmosphere. Through the process of photosynthesis, most plants use the energy in sunlight to convert carbon dioxide from the atmosphere, plus water, into simple sugars. These sugars are then used as building blocks and form the main structural component of the plant. Chlorophyll, a green-colored, magnesium-containing pigment is essential to this process; it is generally present in plant leaves, and often in other plant parts as well. Parasitic plants, on the other hand, use the resources of their host to provide the materials needed for metabolism and growth. Plants usually rely on soil primarily for support and water (in quantitative terms), but they also obtain compounds of nitrogen, phosphorus, potassium, magnesium and other elemental nutrients from the soil. Epiphytic and lithophytic plants depend on air and nearby debris for nutrients, and carnivorous plants supplement their nutrient requirements, particularly for nitrogen and phosphorus, with insect prey that they capture. For the majority of plants to grow successfull ------------------------------ Date: Sun, 29 May 2022 02:44:05 -0400 From: "Massive Military" Subject: Unaired News Report exposes MASSIVE military preparations all across the US Unaired News Report exposes MASSIVE military preparations all across the US http://speedocol.bar/1Jp1zJ9Sc1RvOFIO-fudtJxKEY79FZzv_sXyMt1JXdfp5uZIwg http://speedocol.bar/1C-BY4oREUcrAL23v-2R5WYYdtXxMqN_bxcyTzg1Trb8lBl8nw h she had bought so as not to have to wear a heavier one. It was the crown that she preferred to wear at that time, and appears on other contemporary effigies of her. According to Linecar, "Place your finger over the crown, and there is nothing odd about the portrait: it is just that of a widowed lady in mourning. The disapprobation therefore turns upon the ridiculously small crown ... When she (and the public) saw herself as others saw her, did she, as many of us do, suddenly become aware that she was wearing a 'hat' that did not suit her?" Simon Heffer, in his history of Britain in the decades before the First World War, stated that the engraving on the Jubilee coinage was "honest and lifelike", but that Victoria "looked sour, chinless and porcine, her over-sized head made all the more glaring by a crown several sizes too small being perched upon it, above a bizarre flowing head-dress". The art critic George Moore stated of the Jubilee coinage, "the melting-pot will put that right one of these days". The numismatist Lawrence W. Cobb, writing in 1985, took a more nuanced view of the portrait, "Wyon seems to have tried to soften the Queen's look of age, tension and strain [on the medal ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 28 May 2022 09:11:22 -0400 From: "Control Metabolism" Subject: Fatty Liver Fatty Liver http://livlean.rest/_uKZAGaa-NnYr7i0TRiUSWtJ_ajUwCZ3Trc_Oc22AtMMfo5Wjg http://livlean.rest/veitTa1NGWswFJPuIJC8pwtux5ck2DNUzIvP9sh_ewf6atej he Coal measures are a major source of Paleozoic plant fossils, with many groups of plants in existence at this time. The spoil heaps of coal mines are the best places to collect; coal itself is the remains of fossilised plants, though structural detail of the plant fossils is rarely visible in coal. In the Fossil Grove at Victoria Park in Glasgow, Scotland, the stumps of Lepidodendron trees are found in their original growth positions. The fossilized remains of conifer and angiosperm roots, stems and branches may be locally abundant in lake and inshore sedimentary rocks from the Mesozoic and Cenozoic eras. Sequoia and its allies, magnolia, oak, and palms are often found. Petrified wood is common in some parts of the world, and is most frequently found in arid or desert areas where it is more readily exposed by erosion. Petrified wood is often heavily silicified (the organic material replaced by silicon dioxide), and the impregnated tissue is often preserved in fine detail. Such specimens may be cut and polished using lapidary equipment. F ------------------------------ Date: Sat, 28 May 2022 07:13:35 -0400 From: "Detox Patches" Subject: The toxins leaving your body are what dye the patches to blackâ. The toxins leaving your body are what dye the patches to blackb. http://easymade.shop/dQW9s0MH0R_CeHtFuAgw2uBFToAdSGiTZJSDcjZnnLawQHC3cg http://easymade.shop/YeIyTksZCqunaHiVCeAJbiC1sho_1UOvpiLPJRXOGdrru-jlyA scular plants first appeared during the Silurian period, and by the Devonian had diversified and spread into many different terrestrial environments. They developed a number of adaptations that allowed them to spread into increasingly more arid places, notably the vascular tissues xylem and phloem, that transport water and food throughout the organism. Root systems capable of obtaining soil water and nutrients also evolved during the Devonian. In modern vascular plants, the sporophyte is typically large, branched, nutritionally independent and long-lived, but there is increasing evidence that Paleozoic gametophytes were just as complex as the sporophytes. The gametophytes of all vascular plant groups evolved to become reduced in size and prominence in the life cycle. In seed plants, the microgametophyte is reduced from a multicellular free-living organism to a few cells in a pollen grain and the miniaturised megagametophyte remains inside the megasporangium, attached to and dependent on the parent plant. A megasporangium enclosed in a protective layer called an integument is known as an ovule. After fertilisation by means of sperm produced by pollen grains, an embryo sporophyte develops inside the ovule. The integument becomes a seed coat, and the ovule develops into a seed. Seed plants can survive and reproduce in extremely arid conditions, because they are not dependent on free water for the movement of sp ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #9058 **********************************************