Forwarded from Electroculture farming
The Heart is Not Just a Pump
โModern analysis of the heart has shown that in spite of the fact that the most powerful ventricle of the heart can shoot water six feet into the air, the amount of pressure actually needed to force the blood through the entire length of the bodyโs blood vessels would have to be able to lift a one hundred pound weight one mile highโ - Stephen Buhner
โBlood flow through living vessels is much more like a tornado than anything else: Such a vacuum is necessary for producing a vortexโ - Stephen Buhner
This spiral dance is not only found in the bloodstream, but also in the blood cell itself!
Blood cells in fact spin on their own individual axes of rotation. They are smaller spinning cells in a larger spinning vortex.
The heart itself has recently been discovered not to be a mass of muscle, but rather a โhelicoidal myocardial bandโ that has spiralled in upon itself, creating its unique shape and its separate chambers.
@Electroculturefarming
โModern analysis of the heart has shown that in spite of the fact that the most powerful ventricle of the heart can shoot water six feet into the air, the amount of pressure actually needed to force the blood through the entire length of the bodyโs blood vessels would have to be able to lift a one hundred pound weight one mile highโ - Stephen Buhner
โBlood flow through living vessels is much more like a tornado than anything else: Such a vacuum is necessary for producing a vortexโ - Stephen Buhner
This spiral dance is not only found in the bloodstream, but also in the blood cell itself!
Blood cells in fact spin on their own individual axes of rotation. They are smaller spinning cells in a larger spinning vortex.
The heart itself has recently been discovered not to be a mass of muscle, but rather a โhelicoidal myocardial bandโ that has spiralled in upon itself, creating its unique shape and its separate chambers.
@Electroculturefarming
Forwarded from Electroculture farming
"This image shows the โcymaticsโ, or geometric patterns created in heart cells when applying various sounds. In bio-acoustic sound medicine, is taught that sounds are imprinting every cell and science continues to prove this ancient axiom.
Cardiologist Sean Wu, MD, PhD and Utkan Demirci, PhD, an acoustic bio-engineer use acoustics to manipulate heart cells into intricate patterns. A simple change in frequency and amplitude puts the cells in motion, guides them to a new position and holds them in place. Acoustics can create a form that resembles natural cardiac tissue. With sound they can create new tissue to replace parts of damaged hearts. Acoustics can be used in reconstructing other organ tissue and blood vessels.
Sounds are use to create and harmonize, as well as clean and release. Both principles are used in science using high precision acoustical generators. The same principles can be applied safely by individuals using non-invasive, natural harmonic sounds, such as our voices and acoustic instruments."
Cardiologist Sean Wu, MD, PhD and Utkan Demirci, PhD, an acoustic bio-engineer use acoustics to manipulate heart cells into intricate patterns. A simple change in frequency and amplitude puts the cells in motion, guides them to a new position and holds them in place. Acoustics can create a form that resembles natural cardiac tissue. With sound they can create new tissue to replace parts of damaged hearts. Acoustics can be used in reconstructing other organ tissue and blood vessels.
Sounds are use to create and harmonize, as well as clean and release. Both principles are used in science using high precision acoustical generators. The same principles can be applied safely by individuals using non-invasive, natural harmonic sounds, such as our voices and acoustic instruments."
Forwarded from โ (Eem)
Forwarded from โ (Eem)
๐
Forwarded from โ (Eem)
www.library.wales
The Battles of Alexander the Great - National Library of Wales
View a digital version of The Battles of Alexander the Great (Peniarth MS 481D). This is one of the most elaborately decorated medieval manuscripts in the Library, and a rare survival in its original binding.
Forwarded from DMarie๐ท
Media is too big
VIEW IN TELEGRAM
Forwarded from Tartaria & History Channel (Larry)
A German sailor found dead on a yacht drifting in the Philippine Sea started to Fossilize. After an autopsy was completed it was concluded the Sailor had been dead about a week.
Local fishermen discovered the leathery corpse of Manfred Fritz Bajorat, 59, after they boarded the battered yacht 60 miles off the coast of Barobo.
The dead mariner was still seated at the desk by the radio in the 12-metre (40ft) yacht, slumped over on his right arm, when the fishermen found him. Investigators believe he died of a heart attack or stroke and was swiftly preserved in the warm, salty ocean air.
Join us now
Channel:
https://tttttt.me/TartariaHistoryChannel
Chat:
https://tttttt.me/TartarianEnglishGroup
Local fishermen discovered the leathery corpse of Manfred Fritz Bajorat, 59, after they boarded the battered yacht 60 miles off the coast of Barobo.
The dead mariner was still seated at the desk by the radio in the 12-metre (40ft) yacht, slumped over on his right arm, when the fishermen found him. Investigators believe he died of a heart attack or stroke and was swiftly preserved in the warm, salty ocean air.
Join us now
Channel:
https://tttttt.me/TartariaHistoryChannel
Chat:
https://tttttt.me/TartarianEnglishGroup