From: owner-ammf-digest@smoe.org (alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest) To: ammf-digest@smoe.org Subject: alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #9116 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 Thursday, June 9 2022 Volume 14 : Number 9116 Today's Subjects: ----------------- INVESTMENT ["Elena Yokov Grybov" ] Asian Beauties for Love and More ["Find Asian Love" Subject: INVESTMENT Sir/Madam, I am Ms. Elena Yokov Grybov. I am looking for a mutual benefit business opportuninities with good return on investment (ROI) in your country of residence to invest in. It would be great to work with you. If you are interested, please reply to my email as soon as you can so that i can provide more details. Looking forward to your response, nothing ventured is nothing gained. Yours sincerely ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 9 Jun 2022 04:12:43 -0400 From: "Find Asian Love" Subject: Asian Beauties for Love and More Asian Beauties for Love and More http://legacyza.za.com/XyT2tL3PTGPEXRYPYktJxO1kuKU-6SGBJT79YGof9fFTAZi4mQ http://legacyza.za.com/4dGAs3BRlvvPI1yYTsBjuhrldDJKfDVSzkmNjh_OBkUjQt5BBA he genus Cannabis contains two species which produce useful amounts of psychoactive cannabinoids: Cannabis indica and Cannabis sativa, which are listed as Schedule I medicinal plants in the US; a third species, Cannabis ruderalis, has few psychogenic properties. Cannabis contains more than 460 compounds; at least 80 of these are cannabinoids b chemical compounds that interact with cannabinoid receptors in the brain. As of 2012, more than 20 cannabinoids were being studied by the U.S. FDA. The most psychoactive cannabinoid found in the cannabis plant is tetrahydrocannabinol (or delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol, commonly known as THC). Other cannabinoids include delta-8-tetrahydrocannabinol, cannabidiol (CBD), cannabinol (CBN), cannabicyclol (CBL), cannabichromene (CBC) and cannabigerol (CBG); they have less psychotropic effects than THC, but may play a role in the overall effect of cannabis. The most studied are THC, CBD and CBN. CB1 and CB2 are the primary cannabinoid receptors responsible for several of the effects of cannabinoids, although other receptors may play a role as well. Both belong to a group of receptors called G protein-coupled receptors (GPCRs). CB1 receptors are found in very high levels in the brain and are thought to be responsible for psychoactive effects. CB2 receptors are found peripherally throughout the body and are thought to modul ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 9 Jun 2022 03:37:57 -0400 From: "Consumer Survey" Subject: $500 in Exclusive Rewards - Provide Your Opinion on Costco $500 in Exclusive Rewards - Provide Your Opinion on Costco http://legacyza.za.com/JJJZpSZDlZK6HNud0sZtD8Stt6kI1WI218dELXlafH-M_8ND-A http://legacyza.za.com/N8OZUym5Ud77TSqETDlkm2PdhX9Euiiz8NEhkzfD0XMwzM9R9Q Along the west coast is a sandy semi-enclosed sheltered coral reef lagoon. Most of the population lives in the north, while the south is dominated by forested hills rising to the highest point on the island, Mount Gower (875 m, 2,871 ft). The Lord Howe Island Group comprises 28 islands, islets, and rocks. Apart from Lord Howe Island itself, the most notable of these is the volcanic and uninhabited Ball's Pyramid about 23 km (14 mi; 12 nmi) to the southeast of Howe. To the north lies a cluster of seven small uninhabited islands called the Admiralty Group. The first reported sighting of Lord Howe Island took place on 17 February 1788, when Lieutenant Henry Lidgbird Ball, commander of the Armed Tender HMS Supply, was en route from Botany Bay to found a penal settlement on Norfolk Island. On the return journey, Ball sent a party ashore on Lord Howe Island to claim it as a British possession. It subsequently became a provisioning port for the whaling industry, and was permanently settled in June 1834. When whaling declined, the 1880s saw the beginning of the worldwide export of the endemic kentia palms, which remains a key component of the island's economy. The other continuing industry, tourism, began after World War II ended in 1945. The Lord Howe Island Group is part of the state of New ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 8 Jun 2022 08:04:29 -0400 From: "Go Bag" Subject: [FLASH ALERT] WINNER item inside [FLASH ALERT] WINNER item inside http://heartburnmore.za.com/wQl63X4muobZjdiLgQeA50khGG-ryFJnydHHipTfo41b3hB9qw http://heartburnmore.za.com/IvkWyBoeJP8zrik-6FoS7vwFlNIfDj3R7D70o31YKWeLG_D9Eg oologist Coenraad Jacob Temminck assigned the white swamphen to the swamphen genus Porphyrio as P. albus in 1820, and the zoologist George Robert Gray considered it an albino variety of the Australasian swamphen (P. melanotus) as P. m. varius alba in 1844. The belief that the bird was simply an albino was held by several later writers, and many failed to notice that White cited Lord Howe Island as the origin of the Vienna specimen. In 1860 and 1873, the ornithologist August von Pelzeln said that the Vienna specimen had come from Norfolk Island, and assigned the species to the genus Notornis as N. alba; the takah? (P. hochstetteri) of New Zealand was also placed in that genus at the time. In 1873, the naturalist Osbert Salvin agreed that the Lord Howe Island bird was similar to the takah?, although he had apparently never seen the Vienna specimen, basing his conclusion on a drawing provided by von Pelzeln. Salvin included a takah?-like illustration of the Vienna specimen by the artist John Gerrard Keulemans, based on von Pelzeln's drawing, in his article. In 1875, the ornithologist George Dawson Rowley noted differences between the Vienna and Liverpool specimens and named a new species based on the latter: P. stanleyi, named after Lo ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 8 Jun 2022 10:05:59 -0400 From: "Belly flab" Subject: Just 1 tsp a day melts 48 LBS Just 1 tsp a day melts 48 LBS http://thyroidcom.za.com/xCOqoOdmuF-cVx0VQzXIoO2UZzM3sdQCOM5s4dIQfKRKcPEUTw http://thyroidcom.za.com/WLpZJcT8wZfWdeagjN4cIoDXD-HIwx8LdQTgdCeMclgY-dJniw contemporary accounts indicated that the bird was flightless. Rowley considered the Liverpool specimen (representing the separate species P. stanleyi) capable of flight, due to its longer wings; Rothschild believed that both were flightless, although he was inconsistent about whether their wings were the same length. Van Grouw and Hume found that both specimens showed evidence of an increased terrestrial lifestyle (including decreased wing length, more robust feet and short toes), and were in the process of becoming flightless. Although it may still have been capable of flight, it was behaviourally flightless, similar to other island birds, such as some parrots. Though the white swamphen was similar in size to the Australasian swamphen, it had proportionally shorter wings and therefore a higher wing load b perhaps the highest of all swamphens. Upon the discovery of subfossil pelvic and limb bones in 2021, Hume and colleagues preliminarily stated that these bones were much more robust in the white swamphen than in the volant Australasian swamphen, a trait common in flightless rails. Van Grouw and Hume pointed out that a white colour aberration in birds is rarely caused by albinism (which is less common than formerly believed), but by leucism or progressive greying b a phenomenon van Grouw described in 2012 and 2013. These conditions produce white feathers due to the absence of cells which produce the pigment melanin. Leucism is inherited, and the white feathering is present in juveniles and does not change with age; progressive ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 9 Jun 2022 06:20:05 -0400 From: "Cooking Tool" Subject: If You Invest in One Cooking Tool, This Should be It If You Invest in One Cooking Tool, This Should be It http://linez.za.com/LjS_-NvMaJOwiWS3C6i-lrEayVmnBuKY14i0UTnX-pK3g5Q4AA http://linez.za.com/9vOBKIPilAoRx9fnEHnN1dVqN7GSDqh4-jby6s_adU5TMu8l-w her information: Glossary of entomology terms and Comparison of butterflies and moths Unlike butterflies, most moths (like Laothoe populi) fly by night and hide by day. Butterfly adults are characterized by their four scale-covered wings, which give the Lepidoptera their name (Ancient Greek ????? lepC-s, scale + ?????? pterC3n, wing). These scales give butterfly wings their colour: they are pigmented with melanins that give them blacks and browns, as well as uric acid derivatives and flavones that give them yellows, but many of the blues, greens, reds and iridescent colours are created by structural coloration produced by the micro-structures of the scales and hairs. As in all insects, the body is divided into three sections: the head, thorax, and abdomen. The thorax is composed of three segments, each with a pair of legs. In most families of butterfly the antennae are clubbed, unlike those of moths which may be threadlike or feathery. The long proboscis can be coiled when not in use for sipping nectar from flowers. Nearly all butterflies are diurnal, have relatively bright colours, and hold their wings vertically above their bodies when at rest, unlike the majority of moths which fly by night, are often cryptically coloured (well camouflaged), and either hold their wings flat (touching the surface on which the moth is standing) or fold them closely over their bodies. Some day-flying moths, such as the hummingbird hawk-moth, are exceptions to these rules. Sexual dimorphism in Anthocharis cardamines Anthocharis cardamines Weinsberg 20080424.jpg Male Anthocharis cardamines female (5709794696).jpg Female Butterfly larvae, caterpillars, have a hard (scle ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 9 Jun 2022 05:18:15 -0400 From: "Joe Sanderson" Subject: FREE Survival Go Bag (Limited to first 100) [FLASH ALERT] FREE Survival Go Bag (Limited to first 100) [FLASH ALERT] http://linez.za.com/1oTmff5MunaJy0n4B-J-rczrgABRRirsv89g7LtzsknSsXU1qQ http://linez.za.com/fIdL8P6DSFVqNXxydcj-k579lnNBwaVjNZWjaSJZL6mjQCHFrg nabis has various mental and physical effects, which include euphoria, altered states of mind and sense of time, difficulty concentrating, impaired short-term memory, impaired body movement (balance and fine psychomotor control),:?p7? relaxation, and an increase in appetite. Onset of effects is felt within minutes when smoked, but may take up to 90 minutes when eaten. The effects last for two to six hours, depending on the amount used. At high doses, mental effects can include anxiety, delusions (including ideas of reference), hallucinations, panic, paranoia, and psychosis. There is a strong relation between cannabis use and the risk of psychosis, though the direction of causality is debated. Physical effects include increased heart rate, difficulty breathing, nausea, and behavioral problems in children whose mothers used cannabis during pregnancy; short-term side effects may also include dry mouth and red eyes. Long-term adverse effects may include addiction, decreased mental ability in those who started regular use as adolescents, chronic coughing, susceptibility to respiratory infections, and cannabinoid hyperemesis syndrome. Cannabis is mostly used recreationally or as a medicinal drug, although it may also be used for spiritual purposes. In 2013, between 128 and 232 million people used cannabis (2.7% to 4.9% of the global population between the ages of 15 and 65). It is the most commonly used illegal drug in the world, though it is legal in some jurisdictions, with the highest use among adults (as of 2018) in Zambia, the United ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 8 Jun 2022 07:41:56 -0400 From: "Backyard Revolution" Subject: MIT Device Cuts Power Bills By 65% MIT Device Cuts Power Bills By 65% http://subwaymeal.za.com/s_WKROq-hoBNN3SZMVmQIdHm2ZZ0PJpLeG5K8tEGo-S3xr4U7Q http://subwaymeal.za.com/F36suiuZ-cRV5U7LTlfhhasYEFfGC3AaNdILooUdDRYitGij-g white swamphen was considered common during the late 18th century, it appears to have disappeared quickly; the period from the island's discovery to the last mention of living birds is only two years (1788b90). It had probably vanished by 1834, when Lord Howe Island was first settled, or during the following decade. Whalers and sealers had used the island for supplies, and may have hunted the bird to extinction. Habitat destruction probably did not play a role, and animal predators (such as rats and cats) arrived later. Several contemporary accounts stress the ease with which the island's birds were hunted, and the large number which could be taken to provision ships. In 1789, White described how the white swamphen could be caught: They also found on it, in great plenty, a kind of fowl, resembling much of the Guinea fowl in shape and size, but widely different in colour; they being in general all white, with a red fleshy substance rising, like a cockbs comb, from the head, and not unlike a piece of sealing-wax. These not being birds of flight, nor in the least wild, the sailors availing themselves of their gentleness and inability to take wing from their pursuits, easily struck them down with sticks. The fact that they could be killed with sticks may have been due to their poor flying ability, which would have made them vulnerable to human predation. With no natural enemies on the island, they were tame and curious. The physician John ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 8 Jun 2022 12:36:00 -0400 From: "Superfood" Subject: The U.S Militaryâs Forgotten Horn of Plenty The U.S Militarybs Forgotten Horn of Plenty http://whowhoplsu.za.com/jZDWxPoK9peo5j9S-bKDlrZrv1U15UVTEAKXnJwL_GjdnlU3Wg http://whowhoplsu.za.com/CrwugpYdVknrvyNzxhIQPJa7D7bmrPzVcXg5PJ7q1IZcW9YWrg ned the white swamphen to the swamphen genus Porphyrio as P. albus in 1820, and the zoologist George Robert Gray considered it an albino variety of the Australasian swamphen (P. melanotus) as P. m. varius alba in 1844. The belief that the bird was simply an albino was held by several later writers, and many failed to notice that White cited Lord Howe Island as the origin of the Vienna specimen. In 1860 and 1873, the ornithologist August von Pelzeln said that the Vienna specimen had come from Norfolk Island, and assigned the species to the genus Notornis as N. alba; the takah? (P. hochstetteri) of New Zealand was also placed in that genus at the time. In 1873, the naturalist Osbert Salvin agreed that the Lord Howe Island bird was similar to the takah?, although he had apparently never seen the Vienna specimen, basing his conclusion on a drawing provided by von Pelzeln. Salvin included a takah?-like illustration of the Vienna specimen by the artist John Gerrard Keulemans, based on von Pelzeln's drawing, in his article. In 1875, the ornithologist George Dawson Rowley noted differences between the Vienna and Liverpool specimens and named a new species based on the latter: P. stanleyi, named after Lord ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 9 Jun 2022 04:24:25 -0400 From: "Home Foreclosure Listings" Subject: View Local Foreclosures View Local Foreclosures http://gainaz.za.com/oHONUnsaKCIOr-IcQnYygFdynO-aN8jc3n7pTjOjz8PHTtdQAw http://gainaz.za.com/Tr2PHJJ7zHewtsE1I5FalgJ29TxCwv237WjIK6HANt1nZlkQkA medical marijuana (MMJ), is cannabis and cannabinoids that are prescribed by physicians for their patients. The use of cannabis as medicine has not been rigorously tested due to production and governmental restrictions, resulting in limited clinical research to define the safety and efficacy of using cannabis to treat diseases. Preliminary evidence has indicated that cannabis might reduce nausea and vomiting during chemotherapy and reduce chronic pain and muscle spasms. Regarding non-inhaled cannabis or cannabinoids, a 2021 review found that it provided little relief against chronic pain and sleep disturbance, and caused several transient adverse effects, such as cognitive impairment, nausea, and drowsiness. Short-term use increases the risk of minor and major adverse effects. Common side effects include dizziness, feeling tired, vomiting, and hallucinations. Long-term effects of cannabis are not clear. Concerns include memory and cognition problems, risk of addiction, schizophrenia in young people, and the risk of children taking it by accident. The Cannabis plant has a history of medicinal use dating back thousands of years in many cultures. Some American medical organizations have requested removal of cannabis from the list of Schedule I controlled substances maintained by the United States federal government, followed by regulatory and scientific revie ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 8 Jun 2022 09:05:01 -0400 From: "Ear Wax Vertigo" Subject: The Solution Is a Set of Simple Head Exercises. The Solution Is a Set of Simple Head Exercises. http://fruitz.za.com/6zwh0qVkwGxvwZJ-fBGAFelwMKauyRW4Zp5K7PYoNssVchOWFw http://fruitz.za.com/b8NdXbEmijY0j3MWO9aHjOKL8OYBdLWUCTufdJMq3ZFMrUDEkA aptured native birds (including white swamphens), and all contemporary descriptions and depictions of the species were made between 1788 and 1790. The bird was first mentioned by the master of HMS Supply, David Blackburn, in a 1788 letter to a friend. Other accounts and illustrations were produced by Arthur Bowes Smyth, the fleet's naval officer and surgeon, who drew the first known illustration of the species; Arthur Phillip, governor of New South Wales; and George Raper, midshipman of HMS Sirius. Secondhand accounts also exist, and at least ten contemporary illustrations are known. The accounts indicate that the population varied, and individual bird plumage was white, blue, or mixed blue-and-white. In 1790, the white swamphen was scientifically described and named by the surgeon John White in a book about his time in New South Wales. He named the bird Fulica alba, the specific name being derived from the Latin word for white (albus). White found the bird most similar to the western swamphen (Porphyrio porphyrio, then in the genus Fulica). Although he apparently never visited Lord Howe Island, White may have questioned sailors and based some of his description on earlier accounts. He said he ha ------------------------------ Date: Wed, 8 Jun 2022 06:53:33 -0400 From: "Tactical Dash Camera" Subject: RE: Customer Service Follow-Up (URGENT) RE: Customer Service Follow-Up (URGENT) http://mindpaces.sa.com/0LycuQCwc5dIWmItIn6tTjc5xYjTREDb6quts-m86htuNQOOXQ http://mindpaces.sa.com/guOAPBbGURNPhqSJJccW2GZfLkaoTRROEW_AN3xyV0wBuBQ8DQ \ornithologist George Dawson Rowley noted differences between the Vienna and Liverpool specimens and named a new species based on the latter: P. stanleyi, named after Lord Stanley. He believed that the Liverpool specimen was a juvenile from Lord Howe Island or New Zealand, and continued to believe that the Vienna specimen was from Norfolk Island. Despite naming the new species, Rowley considered the possibility that P. stanleyi was an albino Australasian swamphen and considered the Vienna bird more similar to the takah?. In 1901, the ornithologist Henry Ogg Forbes had the Liverpool specimen dismounted so he could examine it for damage. Forbes found it similar enough to the Vienna specimen to belong to the same species, N. alba. The zoologist Walter Rothschild considered the two species distinct from each other in 1907, but placed them both in the genus Notornis. Rothschild thought that the image published by Phillip in 1789 depicted N. stanleyi from Lord Howe Island, and the image published by White in 1790 showed N. alba from Norfolk Island. He disagreed that the specimens were albinos, thinking instead that they were evolving into a white species. Rothschild published an illustration of N. alba by Keulemans where it is similar to a takah?, inaccurately showing it with dark primary feathers, although the Vienna specimen on which it was based is all white. In 1910, the ornithologist Tom Iredale demonstrated that there was no proof of the white swamphen existing anywhere but on Lord Howe Island and noted that early visitors to Norfolk Island (such as Captain James Cook and Lieutenant Philip Gidley King) did not mention the bird. In 1913, after examining the Vienna specimen, Iredale concluded that the bird belonged in the genus Porphyrio and did not ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 9 Jun 2022 05:10:08 -0400 From: "DateAsianLady" Subject: Asian Girls Are Seeking for True Love Asian Girls Are Seeking for True Love http://gainaz.za.com/CpUBBSrf4QHWNP3JKNHg6R_lo-T8Eu6FeR7AsBSy3Wt75XK7hg http://gainaz.za.com/uia9XL7q8v9PFv5CU6BNFpF7_-VW76Py2Gp1KxW6rmiWVRgkPA abinoid absorption is dependent on its route of administration. Inhaled and vaporized THC have similar absorption profiles to smoked THC, with a bioavailability ranging from 10 to 35%. Oral administration has the lowest bioavailability of approximately 6%, variable absorption depending on the vehicle used, and the longest time to peak plasma levels (2 to 6 hours) compared to smoked or vaporized THC. Similar to THC, CBD has poor oral bioavailability, approximately 6%. The low bioavailability is largely attributed to significant first-pass metabolism in the liver and erratic absorption from the gastrointestinal tract. However, oral administration of CBD has a faster time to peak concentrations (2 hours) than THC. Due to the poor bioavailability of oral preparations, alternative routes of administration have been studied, including sublingual and rectal. These alternative formulations maximize bioavailability and reduce first-pass metabolism. Sublingual administration in rabbits yielded bioavailability of 16% and time to peak concentration of 4 hours. Rectal administration in monkeys doubled bioavailability to 13.5% and achieved peak blood concentrations with ------------------------------ Date: Thu, 9 Jun 2022 06:58:01 -0400 From: "Syno Gut" Subject: Poop Instantly No Matter How Constipated You Are Poop Instantly No Matter How Constipated You Are http://manufacturez.za.com/YV7blH8dhnlnpMDA40HhzUuW6sEPqxlzCfCVI0xnxXyzgll13g http://manufacturez.za.com/xaP-_iDHRyEwm0zupBhY9sWFn2BuYRPky1jr2HJKzxfr3be8CQ s when exposed to air, becoming a water-insoluble, rubbery material which soon sets solid. Butterflies in the genus Agathymus do not fix their eggs to a leaf, instead the newly laid eggs fall to the base of the plant. Eggs are almost invariably laid on plants. Each species of butterfly has its own host plant range and while some species of butterfly are restricted to just one species of plant, others use a range of plant species, often including members of a common family. In some species, such as the great spangled fritillary, the eggs are deposited close to but not on the food plant. This most likely happens when the egg overwinters before hatching and where the host plant loses its leaves in winter, as do violets in this example. The egg stage lasts a few weeks in most butterflies, but eggs laid close to winter, especially in temperate regions, go through a diapause (resting) stage, and the hatching may take place only in spring. Some temperate region butterflies, such as the Camberwell beauty, lay their eggs in the spring and have them hatch in the summer. Caterpillar larva ------------------------------ End of alt.music.moxy-fruvous digest V14 #9116 **********************************************