HTTP/1.1 -1 Read error in cache disk data: SuccessContent-Type: application/rss+xml; charset="utf-8" Last-Modified: Sat, 22 Jan 2022 05:37:05 GMT Content-length: 151575 Connection: Close Proxy-Connection: Close X-Cache: HIT from web1.osuosl.org Server: ProxyTrack 0.5 (HTTrack 3.49.2) Parrot: {1} Active Tickets http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/report/1 Trac Report - * List all active tickets by TT#. * Color each row based on type. en-us Parrot http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/site/parrot_logo.png http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/report/1 Trac v0.11.7 #5991: Why Civil War Is Possible and Terrifying... Fri, 21 Jan 2022 14:39:51 GMT Fri, 21 Jan 2022 14:39:51 GMT <pre class="wiki">Why Civil War Is Possible and Terrifying... https://thyroidsy.us/4WUX8K_Uosu7RUJ3apaR5yeZuC98KbWrdqsvSzBlcHh9tjKZmQ https://thyroidsy.us/LN62rJ1XvCCzslfOU5Ss7eCc6LwIg3g9t7_DnLfCf75YbcGSBA ablished in a nest, squirrels stubbornly ignore fake owls and scarecrows, along with bright flashing lights, loud noises, and ultrasonic or electromagnetic devices. However, squirrels must leave the nest to obtain food and water (usually daily, except in bad weather), affording an opportunity to trap them or exclude them from re-entering. To discourage chewing on an object, it can be coated or covered with something to make it distasteful: for instance a soft cloth doused with chili pepper paste or powder. Capsaicin and Ro-pel are other forms of repellent. To remain effective, the coating must be renewed regularly, especially if it is exposed to the weather. Poisoning squirrels can be problematic because of the risks to other animals or children in the building, and because the odor of a dead squirrel in an attic or wall cavity is very unpleasant and persistent. Trapping is often necessary to remove squirrels from residential structures. Effective baits include fruit, peanut butter, nuts, seeds and vanilla extract. An alternative method is to wait until squirrels have left in search of food, and then close up all their access openings, or to install one-way trap doors or a carefully angled pipe. Attempting to get rid of all squirrels in a neighborhood is generally a futile goal; the focus instead should be on physically excluding them from places where they can do damage. There are other humane techniques to remove squirrels from buildings, but removal is ineffective unless steps are taken to prevent them from immediately breaking in again. Squirrels are often the cause of power outages. They can readily climb a power pole and crawl or run along a power cable. The animals will climb onto power transformers or capacitors looking for food, or a place to cache acorns. If they touch a high voltage conductor and a grounded portion of the enclosure at the same time, they are electrocuted, and often cause a short circuit that shuts down equipment. Squirrels have brought down the high-tech NASDAQ stock market twice and were responsible for a spate of power outages at the University of Alabama. To sharpen their teeth, squirrels will often chew on tree bran </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5991/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5991">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5991/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5991 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5991 Report #5990: Why we don’t live as long as we should... Fri, 21 Jan 2022 14:26:01 GMT Fri, 21 Jan 2022 14:26:01 GMT <pre class="wiki">Why we don’t live as long as we should... https://magicbuddy.us/Cng0hoZ-hp-J4AJFRSW-1RRkAjOzHoPVee4sAlTb1CR_F7TzDg https://magicbuddy.us/3fzPkQYPRsBbnUmmSLtvwPSRPPTdVnjhuaFufCJclsIvysD8fA uirrels are hunted as wild game in certain regions of the United States. Recipes calling for squirrel, for example Brunswick stew, appear in cookbooks, including James Beard's American Cookery and pre-1997 copies of The Joy of Cooking. Squirrel meat can be substituted for rabbit or chicken in many recipes. Although squirrel meat is low in fat content, unlike most game meat it has been found by the American Heart Association to be high in cholesterol. In many areas of the US squirrels are still hunted for food, as they were in earlier years. Squirrel meat was an ingredient in the original recipe for Brunswick stew, a popular dish in various parts of the Southern U.S. Other similar stews were also based on squirrel meat, including burgoo and Southern Illinois chowder. Squirrels Unlimited host a World Championship Squirrel cook-off each year in Bentonville, Arkansas. In the UK For most of the history of the United Kingdom, squirrel has been a meat not commonly eaten, and even scorned by many. In the early 21st century however, wild squirrel has become a more popular meat to cook with, showing up in restaurants and shops more often in Britain as a fashionable alternative meat. Specifically, Britons are cooking with the invasive gray squirrel, which is praised for its low fat content and the fact that it comes from free range sources. Additionally, the novelty of a meat considered unusual or special has contributed to the spread of squirrel consumption. Due to the difficulty of a clean kill and other factors, the majority of squirrel eaten in the UK is acquired from professional hunters, trappers and gamekeepers. Some Britons are eating the gray squirrel as a direct attempt to help the native red squirrel, which has been dwindling since the 19th-century introduction of the gray squirrel, resulting in dramatic habitat loss for the indigenous red squir </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5990/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5990">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5990/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5990 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5990 Report #5989: Does your dog misbehave? Fri, 21 Jan 2022 13:31:53 GMT Fri, 21 Jan 2022 13:31:53 GMT <pre class="wiki">Does your dog misbehave? http://magicbuddy.us/94bnk5MTChXyHG41c0xiDopyh0vM4QtPA5F5wSm8vtFAbKLLhQ http://magicbuddy.us/ftfWuptxp7iJG-TK0a7nOayE9dSmnu7VO1SY5XU_ss3voBNQyg uirrels are sometimes considered pests because of their propensity to chew on various edible and inedible objects, and their stubborn persistence in trying to get what they want. Their characteristic gnawing trait also aids in maintaining sharp teeth, and because their teeth grow continuously, prevents their over-growth. On occasion, squirrels will chew through plastic and even metal to get to food. Tree squirrels may bury food in the ground for later retrieval. Squirrels use their keen sense of smell to search for buried food, but can dig numerous holes in the process. This may become an annoyance to gardeners with strict landscape requirements, especially when the garden contains edibles. Homeowners in areas with a heavy squirrel population must be vigilant in keeping attics, basements, and sheds carefully sealed to prevent property damage caused by nesting squirrels. A squirrel nest is called a "drey". Squirrels are a serious fire hazard when they break into buildings. They often treat exposed power cables as tree branches, and gnaw on the electrical insulation. The resulting exposed conductors can short out, causing a fire. For this reason alone, squirrel nests inside buildings cannot be safely ignored. A squirrel nest will also cause problems with noise, excreta, unpleasant odors, and eventual structural damage. Some homeowners resort to more interesting ways of dealing with this problem, such as collecting and placing fur from pets such as domestic cats and dogs in attics. It is hoped that this fur would indicate to nesting squirrels that a potential predator roams, and will encourage evacuation. Odoriferous repellents, including mothballs and ammonia, are generally ineffective in expelling squirrels from buildin </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5989/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5989">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5989/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5989 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5989 Report #5988: Last Chance to Fix Your Thyroid (Rapid Weight Loss Trick Inside) Fri, 21 Jan 2022 12:23:37 GMT Fri, 21 Jan 2022 12:23:37 GMT <pre class="wiki">Last Chance to Fix Your Thyroid (Rapid Weight Loss Trick Inside) http://thyroidsy.us/a0KdOBeR79GvPZDTDu59XGvL67iAosPuX5EWJTSkS413iABh http://thyroidsy.us/qrSm8svAbiNG602ptwvWIQ9eaqUL7lDx3584Zi3tEP-kPc6r ee squirrels are the members of the squirrel family (Sciuridae) commonly just referred to as "squirrels." They include more than 100 arboreal species native to all continents except Antarctica and Oceania. They do not form a single natural, or monophyletic, group; they are variously related to others in the squirrel family, including ground squirrels, flying squirrels, marmots, and chipmunks. The defining characteristic used to determine which species of Sciuridae are tree squirrels is dependent on their habitat rather than their physiology. Tree squirrels live mostly among trees, as opposed to those that live in burrows in the ground or among rocks. An exception is the flying squirrel that also makes its home in trees, but has a physiological distinction separating it from its tree squirrel cousins: special flaps of skin called patagia, acting as glider wings, which allow gliding flight. The best known genus of tree squirrels is Sciurus, which includes the eastern gray squirrel of North America (introduced to Great Britain in the 1870s), the red squirrel of Eurasia, and the North American fox squirrel, among many others. Many tree squirrel species have adapted to human-altered environments such as rural farms, suburban backyards and urban park </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5988/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5988">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5988/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5988 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5988 Report #5987: 60% of Top Lottery Jackpots Have These 4 Numbers in Common Fri, 21 Jan 2022 12:14:03 GMT Fri, 21 Jan 2022 12:14:03 GMT <pre class="wiki">60% of Top Lottery Jackpots Have These 4 Numbers in Common http://snakespray.co/JcacYwVfTcz5Q9q6cKKa8f3MowCYptvjJ10qLUBitHeilOSjjA http://snakespray.co/Two0YwpQwFwb2nqftCBJb5O4OyeOAyVLM8f81wEywEAnkJCjcQ start germinating before becoming detached from the parent tree. These float on the water and may become lodged on emerging mudbanks and successfully take root. Cracked thorny skin of a Aesculus tree seed Other seeds, such as apple pips and plum stones, have fleshy receptacles and smaller fruits like hawthorns have seeds enclosed in edible tissue; animals including mammals and birds eat the fruits and either discard the seeds, or swallow them so they pass through the gut to be deposited in the animal's droppings well away from the parent tree. The germination of some seeds is improved when they are processed in this way. Nuts may be gathered by animals such as squirrels that cache any not immediately consumed. Many of these caches are never revisited, the nut-casing softens with rain and frost, and the seed germinates in the spring. Pine cones may similarly be hoarded by red squirrels, and grizzly bears may help to disperse the seed by raiding squirrel caches. The single extant species of Ginkgophyta (Ginkgo biloba) has fleshy seeds produced at the ends of short branches on female trees, and Gnetum, a tropical and subtropical group of gymnosperms produce seeds at the tip of a shoot axis </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5987/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5987">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5987/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5987 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5987 Report #5986: 100% Natural Solution to a Pain-Free Life with the Secret Power of Reflexology Fri, 21 Jan 2022 11:47:31 GMT Fri, 21 Jan 2022 11:47:31 GMT <pre class="wiki">100% Natural Solution to a Pain-Free Life with the Secret Power of Reflexology http://pianoforalll.us/IWbDDpFFHG3FyZWCCXAdmev8Rc2L0651G_yJMo0L6DZA8PL9gw http://pianoforalll.us/nUgoepPbZDbUcg6bx7DuGJ788JqfC5U9CvxFh3VeijG4kM-THw ting can occur as early as February. Gestation is about four weeks, and the young (which are altricial) are weaned at about eight weeks of age. There may be up to six kits in a litter, though four is more usual. In the southern and lower parts of their range, they produce two litters each year. Habitat Douglas squirrels live in coniferous forest habitats along the Pacific Coast, from the Sierra Nevada (mountains) of California, northwards to the southwestern coast of British Columbia. Tamiasciurus douglasii prefer old-growth forests or mature second-growth forests, and some authors regard them as dependent on its presence. Mearns's squirrel is a distinctive subspecies of the Douglas squirrel that instead inhabits xeric pine forests in a small portion of Baja California. Throughout most their range, Douglas squirrels essentially replace the American Red Squirrel, which inhabits the coniferous forests of the rest of North America, in these areas. The two species have very minimal overlap in the territory. Douglas squirrels are territorial; in winter, each squirrel occupies a territory of about 10 000 square metres, but during the breeding season a mated pair will defend a single territory together. Douglas squirrels are active by day, throughout the year, often chattering noisily at intruders. On summer nights, they sleep in ball-shaped nests that they make in the trees, but in the winter they use holes in trees as nests. Groups of squirrels seen together during the summer are likely to be juvenil </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5986/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5986">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5986/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5986 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5986 Report #5985: If You Invest in One Cooking Tool, This Should be It Fri, 21 Jan 2022 11:08:10 GMT Fri, 21 Jan 2022 11:08:10 GMT <pre class="wiki">If You Invest in One Cooking Tool, This Should be It http://aliveaftercrisis.co/lns0CJZXgeAuTk6a30l29aanhpZxmn-SWaUUWpkCRqQX6bCodw http://aliveaftercrisis.co/eW9u8y6od_c6owRmaOw8Y97kVjhTyG1_Pl7VjHBhqu4Q_FVNwQ ce, cats, rabbits, dandelions and poison ivy are all examples of species that have become invasive threats to wild species in various parts of the world. Frequently species that are uncommon in their home range become out-of-control invasions in distant but similar climates. The reasons for this have not always been clear and Charles Darwin felt it was unlikely that exotic species would ever be able to grow abundantly in a place in which they had not evolved. The reality is that the vast majority of species exposed to a new habitat do not reproduce successfully. Occasionally, however, some populations do take hold and after a period of acclimation can increase in numbers significantly, having destructive effects on many elements of the native environment of which they have become part. Chains of extinction This final group is one of secondary effects. All wild populations of living things have many complex intertwining links with other living things around them. Large herbivorous animals such as the hippopotamus have populations of insectivorous birds that feed off the many parasitic insects that grow on the hippo. Should the hippo die out, so too will these groups of birds, leading to further destruction as other species dependent on the birds are affected. Also referred to as a domino effect, this series of chain reactions is by far the most destructive process that can occur in any ecological community. Another example is the black drongos and the cattle egrets found in India. These birds feed on insects on the back of cattle, which helps to keep them disease-free. Destroying the nesting habitats of these birds would cause a decrease in the cattle population because of the spread of insect-bor </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5985/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5985">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5985/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5985 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5985 Report #5984: Turn your dry, cracked heel into baby soft feet! Fri, 21 Jan 2022 10:12:04 GMT Fri, 21 Jan 2022 10:12:04 GMT <pre class="wiki">Turn your dry, cracked heel into baby soft feet! http://herpatifix.biz/Pzj9vDDQUihxMbq_5OqjFtkHCogovZB7YRAJuHZLktLeN6Z1Hg http://herpatifix.biz/MtXo8pe8Lx88OMgwA3ZErUCq57NSyiZa7n_lYbNbSQT6wwjyiQ erkill happens whenever hunting occurs at rates greater than the reproductive capacity of the population is being exploited. The effects of this are often noticed much more dramatically in slow growing populations such as many larger species of fish. Initially when a portion of a wild population is hunted, an increased availability of resources (food, etc.) is experienced increasing growth and reproduction as density dependent inhibition is lowered. Hunting, fishing and so on, has lowered the competition between members of a population. However, if this hunting continues at rate greater than the rate at which new members of the population can reach breeding age and produce more young, the population will begin to decrease in numbers. Populations that are confined to islands, whether literal islands or just areas of habitat that are effectively an "island" for the species concerned, have also been observed to be at greater risk of dramatic population rise of deaths declines following unsustainable hunting. Habitat destruction and fragmentation Main articles: Habitat destruction and Habitat fragmentation Amazon Rainforest deforestation Deforestation and increased road-building in the Amazon Rainforest are a significant concern because of increased human encroachment upon wild areas, increased resource extraction and further threats to biodiversity. The habitat of any given species is considered its preferred area or territory. Many processes associated with human habitation of an area cause loss of this area and decrease the carrying capacity of the land for that species. In many cases these changes in land use cause a patchy break-up of the wild landscape. Agricultural land frequently displays this type of extremely fragmented, or relictual, habitat. Farms sprawl across the lands </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5984/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5984">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5984/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5984 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5984 Report #5983: Congratulations! You can get a $50 UPS gift card! Fri, 21 Jan 2022 10:08:36 GMT Fri, 21 Jan 2022 10:08:36 GMT <pre class="wiki">Congratulations! You can get a $50 UPS gift card! http://aliveaftercrisis.co/IMjgzhYSi89N52gJ6Oxi2Gfd4oZElT91hCVnOjq6jrkQrWLfmw http://aliveaftercrisis.co/KaQWXLGu9HoC5VrP6bbLc0N7cPPxNjGGmPgLlzOTuXoQY6guVw ildlife traditionally refers to undomesticated animal species, but has come to include all organisms that grow or live wild in an area without being introduced by humans. Wildlife was also synonymous to game: those birds and mammals that were hunted for sport. Wildlife can be found in all ecosystems. Deserts, forests, rainforests, plains, grasslands, and other areas, including the most developed urban areas, all have distinct forms of wildlife. While the term in popular culture usually refers to animals that are untouched by human factors, most scientists agree that much wildlife is affected by human activities. Some wildlife threaten human safety, health, property, and quality of life. However, many wild animals, even the dangerous ones, have value to human beings. This value might be economic, educational, or emotional in nature. Humans have historically tended to separate civilization from wildlife in a number of ways, including the legal, social, and moral senses. Some animals, however, have adapted to suburban environments. This includes such animals as domesticated cats, dogs, mice, and rats. Some religions declare certain animals to be sacred, and in modern times, concern for the natural environment has provoked activists to protest against the exploitation of wildlife for human benefit or entertai </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5983/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5983">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5983/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5983 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5983 Report #5982: Shopper, You can qualify to get a $50 Walgreens gift card! Fri, 21 Jan 2022 09:29:29 GMT Fri, 21 Jan 2022 09:29:29 GMT <pre class="wiki">Shopper, You can qualify to get a $50 Walgreens gift card! hhttp://herpatifix.biz/MLX8PxSoSCsYFLA3E4lnox9VPWWF1yGZ8V7UGDDcN30G1llCSA http://herpatifix.biz/cOQ7cKIiDgElZHr_xrNq-IjJ7NkSuFcZjNVukMGSatluGENjcw nization and rule. These included small family groups of hunter-gatherers such as the San people of southern Africa; larger, more structured groups such as the family clan groupings of the Bantu-speaking peoples of central, southern, and eastern Africa; heavily structured clan groups in the Horn of Africa; the large Sahelian kingdoms; and autonomous city-states and kingdoms such as those of the Akan; Edo, Yoruba, and Igbo people in West Africa; and the Swahili coastal trading towns of Southeast Africa. By the ninth century AD, a string of dynastic states, including the earliest Hausa states, stretched across the sub-Saharan savannah from the western regions to central Sudan. The most powerful of these states were Ghana, Gao, and the Kanem-Bornu Empire. Ghana declined in the eleventh century, but was succeeded by the Mali Empire which consolidated much of western Sudan in the thirteenth century. Kanem accepted Islam in the eleventh century. In the forested regions of the West African coast, independent kingdoms grew with little influence from the Muslim north. The Kingdom of Nri was established around the ninth century and was one of the first. It is also one of the oldest kingdoms in present-day Nigeria and was ruled by the Eze Nri. The Nri kingdom is famous for its elaborate bronzes, found at the town of Igbo-Ukwu. The bronzes have been dated from as far back as the ninth century. The Kingdom of Ife, historically the first of these Yoruba city-states or kingdoms, established government under a priestly oba ('king' or 'ruler' in the Yoruba language), called the Ooni of Ife. Ife was noted as a major religious and cultural centre in West Africa, and for its unique naturalistic tradition of bronze sculpture. The Ife model of government was adapted at the Oyo Empire, where its obas or kings, called the Alaafins of Oyo, once controlled a large number of other Yoruba and non-Yoruba city-states and kingdoms; the Fon Kingdom of Dahomey was one of the non-Yoru </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5982/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5982">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5982/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5982 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5982 Report #5981: Winter Sale: Up To 93% OFF Canvas Prints Fri, 21 Jan 2022 09:00:01 GMT Fri, 21 Jan 2022 09:00:01 GMT <pre class="wiki">Winter Sale: Up To 93% OFF Canvas Prints http://costcoproof.co/TcCedlhXZ1DFLcQWDmPZV5XYCR35ovuF0nS1CyjIhOZGKBuGSg http://costcoproof.co/EEctHnjOrB2xe4iBiIJd-sCPVXBSxBJIQRa2Wt3ebUQardxvWw olitania from Italian Libya. The proclamation of the Tripolitanian Republic in autumn 1918 was followed by a formal declaration of independence at the 1919 Paris Peace Conference (Treaty of Versailles). This was the first formally declared republican form of government in the Arab world, but it gained little support from international powers, and disintegrated by 1923. Italy under Fascist dictator Benito Mussolini managed to reestablish full control over Libya by 1930. Originally administered as part of a single colony, Italian Tripolitania was a separate colony from 26 June 1927 to 3 December 1934, when it was merged into Libya. The Italian fascists constructed the Marble Arch as a form of an imperial triumphal arch at the border between Tripolitani and Cyrenaica near the coast. Tripolitania experienced a huge development in the late 1930s, when was created the Italian 4th shore with the Province of Tripoli and with Tripoli as a modern "westernized" city. The Tripoli Province ("Provincia di Tripoli" in Italian) was established in 1937, with the official name: Commissariato Generale Provinciale di Tripoli. It was considered a province of the Kingdom of Italy and lasted until 1943. During World War II, several see-saw back and forth campaigns with mobile armour vehicles ebbed and flowed across the North African coastal deserts between first Italian Fascists and the British, soon joined by the Nazi Germans in 1941. Libya was finally occupied by the western Allies, the British moving west from Egypt after their victory at El Alamein in October 1942 against German Field Marshall Erwin Rommel and his Afrika Korps, and the Americans from the west after landings in Operation Torch in Morocco and Algeria in November 1942. From 1942 continuing to the end of the war in 1945 until 1951, when Libya gained independence, Tripolitania and the region of Cyrenaica were administered by the British Military Administration. Italy formally renounced its claim upon the territ </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5981/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5981">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5981/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5981 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5981 Report #5980: Your Current Coverage with State Farm Fri, 21 Jan 2022 08:25:54 GMT Fri, 21 Jan 2022 08:25:54 GMT <pre class="wiki">Your Current Coverage with State Farm http://surveyidea.us/Li4dif0uUc_2vQyvlzW-wIkpDaUdrsG4MluVg8RGeI_eS0f8sg http://surveyidea.us/xKwbrFun8P6KtZgi9QFslKI4iRSPpE2WdYrIdPcSqSsHs5APlQ ximately 500 abandoned ships were used at times as storeships, saloons, and hotels; many were left to rot, and some were sunk to establish title to the underwater lot. By 1851, the harbor was extended out into the bay by wharves while buildings were erected on piles among the ships. By 1870, Yerba Buena Cove had been filled to create new land. Buried ships are occasionally exposed when foundations are dug for new buildings. California was quickly granted statehood in 1850, and the U.S. military built Fort Point at the Golden Gate and a fort on Alcatraz Island to secure the San Francisco Bay. Silver discoveries, including the Comstock Lode in Nevada in 1859, further drove rapid population growth. With hordes of fortune seekers streaming through the city, lawlessness was common, and the Barbary Coast section of town gained notoriety as a haven for criminals, prostitution, and gambling. Entrepreneurs sought to capitalize on the wealth generated by the Gold Rush. Early winners were the banking industry, with the founding of Wells Fargo in 1852 and the Bank of California in 1864. Development of the Port of San Francisco and the establishment in 1869 of overland access to the eastern U.S. rail system via the newly completed Pacific Railroad (the construction of which the city only reluctantly helped support) helped make the Bay Area a center for trade. Catering to the needs and tastes of the growing population, Levi Strauss opened a dry goods business and Domingo Ghirardelli began manufacturing chocolate. Chinese immigrants made the city a polyglot culture, drawn to "Old Gold Mountain", creating the city's Chinatown quarter. In 1870, Asians made up 8% of the popul </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5980/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5980">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5980/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5980 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5980 Report #5979: Congratulations! You can get a $50 Verizon gift card! Fri, 21 Jan 2022 08:04:27 GMT Fri, 21 Jan 2022 08:04:27 GMT <pre class="wiki">Congratulations! You can get a $50 Verizon gift card! http://costcoproof.co/pelidbRBqdjB6-aK1VSFVlluFDweXGrXyME8ABHwsxsSlgmcbA http://costcoproof.co/KI5IEC0LloxvMjQURz8O9dzQQsll2dNcmjDS2YzZSs18hOkxng The first Yarrow water drums or "troughs" were D-shaped with a flat tubeplate, so as to provide an easy mounting for the tubes. The tubeplate was bolted to the trough and could be dismantled for maintenance and tube cleaning. This D shape is not ideal for a pressure drum though, as pressure will tend to distort it into a more circular section. Experience of boiler explosions had shown that sharp internal corners inside boilers were also prone to erosion by grooving. Later boilers used a more rounded section, despite the difficulty of inserting and sealing the tube ends when they were no longer perpendicular. These later drums had a manhole in the ends for access. Downcomers The circulation in a Yarrow boiler depended on a temperature difference between the inner and outer tube rows of a bank, and particularly upon the rates of boiling. Whilst this is easy to maintain at low powers, a higher pressure Yarrow boiler will tend to have less temperature difference and thus will have less effective circulation. This effect can be counteracted by providing external downcomers, outside the heated flue area. Although most Yarrow boilers did not require downcomers, some were fitted with them. </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5979/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5979">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5979/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5979 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5979 Report #5978: Congratulations! You can get a $100 Homegoods gift card! Fri, 21 Jan 2022 07:25:49 GMT Fri, 21 Jan 2022 07:25:49 GMT <pre class="wiki">Congratulations! You can get a $100 Homegoods gift card! http://surveyidea.us/zkp2-fnbHhRKYMMB7WveYTL_7cH7_jUng7S-AvHO89NXyaf-rw http://surveyidea.us/118MAtxsgVSJq83GPQ_zdPHJ0co5i3fRQqVdcxH5h8f-65bCWQ ro and his squires come into the hall and are joined by Elvira, Valton, Giorgio and the ladies and gentlemen of the castle. After a general welcome from all assembled, Arturo expresses his new-found happiness. (Aria, Arturo; then Giorgio and Walton; then all assembled: A te, o cara / amore talora / "In you beloved, love led me in secrecy and tears, now it guides me to your side".) Valton tells everyone that he will not be able to attend the wedding ceremony and he provides Arturo with a safe conduct pass. A mysterious lady appears, and Valton tells her that he will be escorting her to London to appear before Parliament. Arturo is curious. Giorgio tells him that she is suspected of being a Royalist spy. As Elvira leaves to prepare herself for the wedding and the others depart in various directions, Arturo hangs back and finds the mysterious lady alone. He discovers that she is Enrichetta (Henrietta Maria), widow of the executed King Charles I. Insisting that she not be concerned about Elvira, Arturo vows to save her: (Aria, Riccardo; then Enrichetta; then together: Non parlar di lei che adoro, / di valor non mi spogliar / "Do not speak of her whom I adore; do not take away my courage. You shall be saved, oh unhappy woman.") Observed by Arturo and Enrichetta, Elvira appears singing a joyful polonaise (Son vergin vezzosa / "I am a pretty maiden dressed for her wedding"), but she engages the Queen in conversation asking for help with the ringlets of her hair. To allow that to happen, she removes her wedding veil and places it over Enrichetta's head. Both Arturo and Enrichetta realise that this may allow them to escape, and as they proceed, they are challenged by Riccardo who believes the woman to be Elvira. He almost provokes a fight with Arturo until he discovers that she is not Elvira; then, he is content to allow them to pass, swearing not to reveal any information. When the wedding party enters, they ask for Arturo, then learn, largely from Riccardo, that he has fled with Enrichetta. Pursuit is organised. Becoming increasingly distraught, Elvira believes that she sees Arturo: (Aria; then ensemble: Oh, vieni al tempio, fedele Arturo / "Ah! come, ah! come! Oh! come to the chu </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5978/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5978">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5978/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5978 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5978 Report #5977: The Only Book You Need When Help is Not On The Way Thu, 20 Jan 2022 14:59:25 GMT Thu, 20 Jan 2022 14:59:25 GMT <pre class="wiki">The Only Book You Need When Help is Not On The Way http://longevitor.biz/7zftg3NiNMMkTfT6Zs6Wc47hKSZYtoP9wJi0-Kvcg8sQ3dD9UQ http://longevitor.biz/4ikug6uoaAl3HvPZXbnahpu3tLHHBkfFVOIILmNQ1js7N3ce3w lder a building is, the more likely it is to be listed. All buildings erected before 1700 that "contain a significant proportion of their original fabric" will be listed. Most buildings built between 1700 and 1840 are listed. After 1840 more selection is exercised and "particularly careful selection" is applied after 1945. Buildings less than 30 years old are rarely listed unless they are of outstanding quality and under threat. Aesthetic merits: i.e. the appearance of a building. However, buildings that have little visual appeal may be listed on grounds of representing particular aspects of social or economic history. Selectivity: where a large number of buildings of a similar type survive, the policy is only to list the most representative or significant examples. National interest: significant or distinctive regional buildings; e.g. those that represent a nationally important but localised industry. The state of repair of a building is not deemed to be a relevant consideration for listing. Additionally: Any buildings or structures constructed before 1 July 1948 that fall within the curtilage of a listed building are treated as part of the listed building. The effect of a proposed development on the setting of a listed building is a material consideration in determining a planning application. Setting is defined as "the surroundings in which a heritage is experienced". Although the decision to list a building may be made on the basis of the architectural or historic interest of one small part of the building, the listing protection nevertheless applies to the whole building. Listing applies not just to the exterior fabric of the building itself, but also to the int </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5977/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5977">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5977/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5977 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5977 Report #5976: Need To Pump Your Septic Tank? THIS Eliminates The Need For Pumping For Good Thu, 20 Jan 2022 13:59:49 GMT Thu, 20 Jan 2022 13:59:49 GMT <pre class="wiki">Need To Pump Your Septic Tank? THIS Eliminates The Need For Pumping For Good http://herpfix.biz/4UKq2HZDCAHWjeIPIJ9_iGmchxti7-fZywpw9exBi19TQxV_gA http://herpfix.biz/J5rZmYGSeywgzJNoCG-gdtel9Bz8Kh4WfdKCB-lG9NLwFoa4aw view of Heritage Policy in 2006 was criticised, and the Government began a process of consultation on changes to Planning Policy Guidance 15, relating to the principles of selection for listing buildings in England. The government's White Paper "Heritage Protection for the 21st Century" published on 8 March 2007 offered a commitment to sharing the understanding of the historic environment and more openness in the process of designation. In 2008, a draft Heritage Protection Bill was subject to pre-legislative scrutiny before its passage through UK Parliament. The legislation was abandoned despite strong cross-party support, to make room in the parliamentary legislative programme for measures to deal with the credit crunch, though it may be revived in future. The proposal was that the existing registers of buildings, parks and gardens, archaeology and battlefields, maritime wrecks, and World Heritage Sites be merged into a single online register that will "explain what is special and why". English Heritage would become directly responsible for identifying historic assets in England and there would be wider consultation with the public and asset owners, and new rights of appeal. There would have been streamlined systems for granting consent for work on historic assets. After several years of consultation with heritage groups, charities, local planning authorities, and English Heritage, in March 2010 the DCLG published Planning Policy Statement 5, "Planning for the Historic Environment". This replaced PPG15 and set out the government's national policies on the conservation of the historic environment in England. PPS5 was supported by a Practice Guide, endorsed by the DCLG, the DCMS, and Englis </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5976/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5976">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5976/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5976 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5976 Report #5975: Herpes Virus Hiding Place Revealed! (Nobody Believed This!) Thu, 20 Jan 2022 13:05:07 GMT Thu, 20 Jan 2022 13:05:07 GMT <pre class="wiki">Herpes Virus Hiding Place Revealed! (Nobody Believed This!) http://herpfix.biz/jssRqWzMJhaqkRyr6gCgfnXh4zkQXLJKJRSO94PUUa8TXHO0kg http://herpfix.biz/s7cTXt3XnWtg2EIQJkRfttMotAdscBqsNTK3-HZmSmd8DKynsw ildings and other heritage assets. The decision about whether or not to list a building is made by the Secretary of State, although the process is administered in England by Historic England. In Wales (where it is a devolved issue) it is administered by Cadw on behalf of the Welsh Parliament and in Scotland it is administered by Historic Environment Scotland on behalf of the Scottish Ministers. English heritage protection reform There have been several attempts to simplify the heritage planning process for listed buildings in England. As of 2021, few changes had been implemented. 100 King Street, Manchester, built 1935, listed Grade II* in 1974 The review process was started in 2000 by Alan Howarth, then minister at the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS). The outcome was the paper "The Power of Place" in 2000, followed by the subsequent policy document "The Historic Environment: A Force for Our Future" published by the DCMS and the Department of the Environment, Transport and the Regions (DTLR) in December 2001. The launch of the Government's Heritage Protection Reform (HPR) report in July 2003 by the DCMS, entitled "Protecting our historic environment: Making the system work better", asked questions about how the current designation systems could be improved. The HPR decision report "Review of Heritage Protection: The Way Forward", a green paper published in June 2004 by the DCMS, committed the UK government and English Heritage to a process of reform inclu </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5975/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5975">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5975/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5975 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5975 Report #5974: Guess which of THESE reverses “Old Age?” (take the quiz!) Thu, 20 Jan 2022 12:59:36 GMT Thu, 20 Jan 2022 12:59:36 GMT <pre class="wiki">Guess which of THESE reverses “Old Age?” (take the quiz!) http://longevitor.biz/b3Cc04_jUDby5NuKgWU0RESYHC4ZfJziWNprc1euIPcTMu5Qvg http://longevitor.biz/SY1UoZv4YoNvXa8zeVB5o_bIJ2I_2lVjNFt0AfkwHTXBIhOslQ hough a limited number of 'ancient monuments' were given protection under the Ancient Monuments Protection Act 1882, there was reluctance to restrict the owners of occupied buildings in what they could do to their property. It was the damage to buildings caused by German bombing during World War II that prompted the first listing of buildings that were deemed to be of particular architectural merit. Three hundred members of the Royal Institute of British Architects and the Society for the Protection of Ancient Buildings were dispatched to prepare the list under the supervision of the Inspectorate of Ancient Monuments, with funding from the Treasury. The listings were used as a means of determining whether a particular building should be rebuilt if it was damaged by bombing, with varying degrees of success. In Scotland, the process slightly predated the war with the Marquess of Bute (in his connections to the National Trust for Scotland) commissioning the architect Ian Lindsay in September 1936 to survey 103 towns and villages based on an Amsterdam model using three categories (A, B and C). The basis of the current more comprehensive listing process was developed from the wartime system and was enacted by a provision in the Town and Country Planning Act 1947 covering England and Wales, and the Town and Country Planning (Scotland) Act 1947 covering Scotland. Listing was first introduced into Northern Ireland under the Planning (Northern Ireland) Order 1972. The listing process has since developed slightly differently in each part of the UK. Heritage protection In the UK, the process of protecting the built historic environment (i.e. getting a heritage asset legally protected) is called 'designation'. To complicate things, several different terms are used because the processes use separate legislation: buildings are 'listed'; ancient monuments are 'scheduled', wrecks are 'protected', and battlefields, gardens and parks are 'registered'. A heritage asset is a part of the historic enviro </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5974/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5974">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5974/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5974 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5974 Report #5973: Congratulations! You can get a $100 Lowes gift card! Thu, 20 Jan 2022 12:06:57 GMT Thu, 20 Jan 2022 12:06:57 GMT <pre class="wiki">Congratulations! You can get a $100 Lowes gift card! http://alphazymplus.co/d5RPejsx0L8VXivl_nVoyZRJ2gLVySukSUX3_M4WlRlCCeGwRA http://alphazymplus.co/clCCQD-bNi3egsxv0AnUroK0fzM8tslkuYv8YU4jCgBa1MzNMw nfusion, some heritage assets can be both listed buildings and scheduled monuments (e.g. Dunblane Cathedral). World Heritage Sites, conservation areas and protected landscapes can also contain both scheduled monuments and listed buildings. Where a heritage asset is both scheduled and listed, many provisions of the listing legislation are dis-applied (for example those relating to building preservation notices). In England, Scotland and Wales, protection of monuments can also be given by another process, additional to or separate from scheduling, taking the monument into state ownership or placing it under guardianship, classifying it as a guardianship monument under the terms of Section 12 of the 1979 Act (as amended by the National Heritage Act 1983 in England, and by the Historic Environment (Amendment) (Scotland) Act 2011) (e.g. St Rule's Church in St Andrews). The latter meaning that the owner retains possession, while the appropriate national heritage body maintains it and (usually) opens it to the public. All monuments in guardianship on the passing of the 1979 Act were automatically included in the 'schedule'. Scheduling is not usually applied to underwater sites although historic wrecks can be protected under the Protection of Wrecks Act 1973, although three maritime sites have been designated as scheduled monuments. In Scotland new powers for protection of the marine heritage, better integrated with other maritime conservation powers, have been given by the Marine (Scotland) Act 2010. It is intended that the marine scheduled monuments will be protected by this new Act. The Historic Environment (Amendment) (Scotland) Act, which amended the 1979 Act, was passed into law in 2011. Wider areas can be protected by designating their locations as Areas of Archaeological Importance (AAI) under the Ancient Monuments and Archaeological Areas Act 1979. As of 2011, only five city centres in England have bee </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5973/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5973">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5973/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5973 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5973 Report #5972: Brighten up cold winter mornings with these warm and cosy socks. Thu, 20 Jan 2022 11:45:55 GMT Thu, 20 Jan 2022 11:45:55 GMT <pre class="wiki">Brighten up cold winter mornings with these warm and cosy socks. http://visisooth.biz/5Q_mR3qa5V3IuNqPNdZv-V71vn-22iEgXLbMp96ExE8zUa09UA http://visisooth.biz/T0kY9Jc_-fYKi0jxAnErXQdizfEg1TMCfbNHvZa8wMxMclf7XA pite perceptions to the contrary, only a very small proportion of applications for scheduled monument consent are refused. In Scotland in the ten years from 1995 to 2005, out of 2,156 applications, only 16 were refused. Development close to a scheduled monument which might damage its setting is also a material consideration in the planning system. Rosslyn Chapel is an intact church, though only the unused sections are protected by scheduling Management of scheduled monuments Historic England, Historic Environment Scotland and Cadw monitor the condition of scheduled monuments. They encourage owners to maintain scheduled monuments in good condition by using sympathetic land uses, for example restricting stock levels or controlling undergrowth which can damage archaeology below ground. Historic Environment Scotland, Cadw, Historic England and Natural England also offer owners advice on how to manage their monuments. There are some grant incentive schemes for owners, including schemes run by Historic England and by Natural England for farmers and land managers. Historic Environment Scotland, Historic England and Cadw, occasionally award grants to support management agreements for monuments, and in some cases can help with major repairs. In England, the condition of scheduled monuments is also reported through the Heritage at Risk survey. In 2008 this survey extended to include all listed buildings, scheduled monuments, registered parks and gardens, registered battlef </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5972/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5972">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5972/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5972 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5972 Report #5971: Shopper, You can qualify to get a $90 Paypal gift card! Thu, 20 Jan 2022 10:49:28 GMT Thu, 20 Jan 2022 10:49:28 GMT <pre class="wiki">Shopper, You can qualify to get a $90 Paypal gift card! http://visisooth.biz/yKNprAXSvtn7pvwb_OTcaUHoIuu28RtfCBBFf6g7io2TJefxww http://visisooth.biz/3EdGmBQhrjy1McUUuH5YtwhcxwZshZhWBinLnRFuYHRlhNcL8g rference with private property was not politically possible. The Ancient Monuments Protection Act 1900 extended the scope of the legislation to include medieval monuments. Pressure grew for stronger legislation. In a speech in 1907, Robert Hunter, chairman of the National Trust, observed that only a further 18 sites had been added to the original list of 68. 'Scheduling' in the modern sense only became possible with the passing of the Ancient Monuments Consolidation and Amendment Act 1913. When Pitt Rivers died in 1900 he was not immediately replaced as Inspector. Charles Peers, a professional architect, was appointed as Inspector in 1910 in the Office of Works becoming Chief Inspector in 1913. The job title 'Inspector' is still in use. The process for designating a scheduled monument Scheduling offers protection because it makes it illegal to undertake a great range of 'works' within a designated area, without first obtaining 'scheduled monument consent'. However, it does not affect the owner's freehold title or other legal interests in the land, nor does it give the general public any new rights of public access. The process of scheduling does not automatically imply that the monument is being poorly managed or that it is under threat, nor does it impose a legal obligation to undertake any additional management of the monument. In England and Wales the authority for designating, re-designating and de-designating a scheduled monument lies with the Secretary of State for the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS). The Secretary of State kee </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5971/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5971">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5971/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5971 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5971 Report #5970: Keeping our feet warm in winter is essential for both our comfort and our health. Thu, 20 Jan 2022 10:34:00 GMT Thu, 20 Jan 2022 10:34:00 GMT <pre class="wiki">Keeping our feet warm in winter is essential for both our comfort and our health. http://testoster.biz/KqUqM-3ADWRe-hG7_dxJQKyfHXmFGTL3RaivVLmtegwXSXha0A http://testoster.biz/unqEkpPaHaWum4znyMYTgRFQLLN4JSXLyv9H-S1VMXbtSzdLUg duling system has been criticised by some as being cumbersome. In England and Wales it also has a limited definition of what constitutes a monument. Features such as ritual landscapes, battlefields and flint scatters are difficult to schedule; recent amendment in Scotland (see below) has widened the definition to include "any site... comprising any thing, or group of things, that evidences previous human activity". The wide range of legislation means that the terminology describing how historic sites are protected varies according to the type of heritage asset. Monuments are "scheduled", buildings are "listed", whilst battlefields, parks and gardens are "registered", and historic wrecks are "protected". Historic urban spaces receive protection through designation as "conservation areas", and historic landscapes are designated through national park and Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty (AONB) legislation. In addition, there are areas in the UK are also protected as World Heritage Sites. To add to the confusion, some heritage assets can be both listed buildings and scheduled monuments (e.g. Dunblane Cathedral). World Heritage Sites, conservation areas and protected landscapes can also contain both scheduled monuments and listed buildings. Where a heritage asset is both scheduled and listed, many provisions of the listing legislation are dis-applied (for example those relating to building preservation notices). In England, Scotland and Wales, protection of monuments can also be given by another process, additional to or separate from scheduling, taking the monument into state ownership or placing it under guardianship, classifying it as a guardianship monument under the terms of Section 12 of the 1979 Act (as amended by the National Heritage Act 1983 in England, and by the Historic Environment (Amendment) (Scotland) Act 2011) (e.g. St Rule's Church in St Andrews). The latter meaning that the owner retains possession, while the appropriate national heritage body maintains it and </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5970/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5970">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5970/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5970 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5970 Report #5969: Last Day to Grab this BIGPromo Discount50%LastChance Thu, 20 Jan 2022 09:54:19 GMT Thu, 20 Jan 2022 09:54:19 GMT <pre class="wiki">Last Day to Grab this BIGPromo Discount50%LastChance http://testoster.biz/8E2WRdpOiGSA3kKVdo9YPwzt77vzFTnrPUrLSCYmJJ0Hprt4QQ http://testoster.biz/OoDlCLPKpCT1DNCMf1CJs9RVkoNmrDftrNMCvV83JubB_e3qqA duling offers protection because it makes it illegal to undertake a great range of 'works' within a designated area, without first obtaining 'scheduled monument consent'. However, it does not affect the owner's freehold title or other legal interests in the land, nor does it give the general public any new rights of public access. The process of scheduling does not automatically imply that the monument is being poorly managed or that it is under threat, nor does it impose a legal obligation to undertake any additional management of the monument. In England and Wales the authority for designating, re-designating and de-designating a scheduled monument lies with the Secretary of State for the Department for Culture, Media and Sport (DCMS). The Secretary of State keeps the list, or schedule, of these sites. The designation process was first devolved to Scotland and Wales in the 1970s and is now operated there by the Scottish Government and the Welsh Government respectively. The government bodies with responsibility for archaeology and the historic environment in Britain are: Historic England in England, Cadw in Wales, and Historic Environment Scotland in Scotland. The processes for application and monitoring scheduled monuments is administered in England by Historic England; in Wales by Cadw on behalf of the Senedd (Welsh Parliament); and in Scotland by Historic Environment Scotland on behalf of the Scottish Ministers. In Northern Ireland, the term "Scheduled Historic Monument" is used. These sites protected under Article 3 of the Historic Monuments and Archaeological Objects (Northern Ireland) Order 1995. The schedule contains over 1,900 sites, and is mainta </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5969/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5969">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5969/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5969 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5969 Report #5968: We Can Help You Get Laid Tonight Thu, 20 Jan 2022 09:18:47 GMT Thu, 20 Jan 2022 09:18:47 GMT <pre class="wiki">We Can Help You Get Laid Tonight http://sugarblaster.co/6aExkQDBuQFFqWtm9acNkfwim-gflD1fOINGdBkTPtUFdUI2jw http://sugarblaster.co/O4VFev2d1TaCMtDnP4iYBf5m3knAj9qih5QS_IXFCb1xRgj9zg ilt for Walter Gervase and dedicated to the Blessed Virgin Mary. Upon his death in 1257, Gervase left an endowment of 50 shillings a year for a priest to hold three services a week to pray for him, his father, and his family. The chapel continued in use until at least 1537 but was destroyed in 1546 during the dissolution of the monasteries. Only stone fragments from the foundations survive. According to Hooker, Gervase and his wife were buried in another chapel, attached to St Edmund's Church, in which there was a "handsome monument" to Gervase's memory. This chapel was alienated from the church during the Reformation and converted into a private house; the monument was removed and defaced. Only the foundations of the chapel remained by the 19th century. At the western end of the bridge (on dry land) was St Thomas's Church, built at a similar time to the bridge. The exact date of construction is unknown, but it was dedicated to St Thomas Becket, who was canonised in 1173, and the first known record of it dates from 1191. It became the parish church for Cowick (most of the area is now known as St Thomas) in 1261. The church was swept away in a major flood at the beginning of the 15th century and rebuilt further away from the river. The new building, on Cowick Street, was consecrated in 1412. It underwent significant rebuilding in the 17th and 19th centuries after it was set alight during the English Civil War. The church is a grade I listed building. Secular buildings Bridge chapels were common on medieval bridges but secular buildings were not. Around 135 major stone bridges were built in Britain in the medieval era. Most, though not all, had some form of bridge chapel either on the bridge itself or on the approach, but only 12 are documented as having secular buildings on the bridge, of which the only surviving example with buildings intact is High Bridge in Lincoln. The Exe Bridge had timber-fram </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5968/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5968">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5968/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5968 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5968 Report #5967: Beautiful and unique Haarko Santoku knives are essential for every chef Knife slicing tomato Thu, 20 Jan 2022 08:55:45 GMT Thu, 20 Jan 2022 08:55:45 GMT <pre class="wiki">Beautiful and unique Haarko Santoku knives are essential for every chef Knife slicing tomato http://legendpotencyx.co/7mBl5BHfKP9YU0mWFOYiweWF9gXwd3-XWw5VuDg__QZITmmYBQ http://legendpotencyx.co/1FPc6e9QeWHDs7ZwY5DIvqmli1RtaT2soDYWylCQjwZoa5M9SA ter Cathedral had launched a bid to restore the baths and open an underground centre for visitors. In the late 2nd century, the ditch and rampart defences around the old fortress were replaced by a bank and wall enclosing a much larger area, some 92 acres (37 ha). Although most of the visible structure is older, the course of the Roman wall was used for Exeter's subsequent city walls. Thus about 70% of the Roman wall remains, and most of its route can be traced on foot. The Devonian Isca seems to have been most prosperous in the first half of the 4th century: more than a thousand Roman coins have been found around the city and there is evidence for copper and bronze working, a stock-yard, and markets for the livestock, crops, and pottery produced in the surrounding countryside. The dating of the coins so far discovered, however, suggests a rapid decline: virtually none have been discovered dated after the year 380. Medieval times See also: Sub-Roman Britain, Saxon England, and Norman England Bishop Ussher identified the Cair Pensa vel Coyt, listed among the 28 cities of Britain by the History of the Britons, as Isca, although David Nash Ford read it as a reference to Penselwood and thought it more likely to be Lindinis (modern Ilchester). Nothing is certainly known of Exeter from the time of the Roman withdrawal from Britain around the year 410 until the seventh century. By that time, the city was held by the Saxons, who had arrived in Exeter after defeating the British Dumnonians at Peonnum in Somerset in 658. It seems likely that the Saxons maintained a quarter of the city for the Britons under their own laws around present-day Bartholomew Street, which was known as "Britayne" Street until 1637 in memory of its former occupa </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5967/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5967">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5967/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5967 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5967 Report #5966: Congratulations! You can get a $50 Costco gift card! Thu, 20 Jan 2022 08:07:18 GMT Thu, 20 Jan 2022 08:07:18 GMT <pre class="wiki">Congratulations! You can get a $50 Costco gift card! http://sugarblaster.co/otSOmlGEzVJpzrms4rHzDdY3ApBgOHioKukVLnzJ48EaSXL1wA http://sugarblaster.co/WNfkEiecN9u2fbAbStQIzrF4kNED_6zbTB1x6ogmP6R3x5mj eter was founded as Isca Dumnoniorum by the Romans in the first century CE. It became an important administrative centre for the south west of England, but travel further west (to the remainder of Devon and the whole of Cornwall) required crossing the River Exe. The river at Exeter was naturally broad and shallow, making it the lowest reliable crossing point before its tidal estuary. There are records of a crossing from Roman times, most likely in the form of a timber bridge. No trace of any Roman bridge survives; it is likely that, once replaced, the bridge deck was simply left to degrade and any masonry supports would have been washed away by floodwaters. Bridge building was sparse in England through the Early Middle Ages (the period following the decline of the Roman Empire until after the Norman conquest of England in the late 11th century). Work on the Pont d'Avignon in the south of France began in the 1170s. London Bridge, over the River Thames on the opposite side of England, was begun around the same time, and was completed in 1209. Several similar bridges were constructed across England in this era, of which Exeter's, London's, and the Dee Bridge in Chester were among the largest examples. Only one other bridge of a similar age survives in Devon, at Clyst St Mary, just east of Exeter; another exists at Yeolmbridge, historically in Devon but now in Cornwall. Until the 12th century, the Exe was crossed by a ford, which was notoriously treacherous and was supplemented by a ferry for foot passengers. According to John Hooker, chamberlain of Exeter, who wrote a history of the city in the 16th century (around 400 years after the bridge was built), a rudimentary timber bridge existed at the site but this was also treacherous, particularly in the winter when the river was in flood. Hooker describes how pedestrians were washed off the bridge on several occas </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5966/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5966">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5966/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5966 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5966 Report #5965: Celebrate with a $250 Sam’s Club Gift Card this Thanksgiving Thu, 20 Jan 2022 07:39:03 GMT Thu, 20 Jan 2022 07:39:03 GMT <pre class="wiki">Celebrate with a $250 Sam’s Club Gift Card this Thanksgiving http://flatballyshke.info/iQUNlWGOopDsYruPHc8Vi504Svc6CAkHK0bmvKtvGAXN7jlfzA http://flatballyshke.info/Vhd_y8l6ERoty3Q2PKEk7SVn5vWgjUwRT71W42woctS6MSKl9w ssings which had been in use sporadically since Roman times. The project was the idea of Nicholas and Walter Gervase, father and son and influential local merchants, who travelled the country to raise funds. No records survive of the bridge's builders. The result was a bridge at least 590 feet (180 metres) long, which probably had 17 or 18 arches, carrying the road diagonally from the west gate of the city wall across the River Exe and its wide, marshy flood plain. St Edmund's Church, the bridge chapel, was built into the bridge at the time of its construction, and St Thomas's Church was built on the riverbank at about the same time. The Exe Bridge is unusual among British medieval bridges for having had secular buildings on it as well as the chapel. Timber-framed shops, with houses above, were in place from at least the early 14th century, and later in the bridge's life, all but the most central section carried buildings. As the river silted up, land was reclaimed, allowing a wall to be built from the side of St Edmund's which protected a row of houses and shops which became known as Frog Street. Walter Gervase also commissioned a chantry chapel, built opposite the church, which came into use after 1257 and continued until the Reformation in the mid-16th century. The medieval bridge collapsed and had to be partially rebuilt several times throughout its life, the first of which was recorded in 1286. By 1447 the bridge was severely dilapidated, and the mayor of Exeter appealed for funds to repair it. By the 16th century, it was again in need of repairs. Nonetheless, the bridge was in use for almost 600 years, until a replacement was built in 1778 and the arches across the river were demolished. That bridge was itself replaced in 1905, and again in 1969 by a pair of bridges. During construction of the twin bridges, eight and a half arches of the medieval bridge were unco </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5965/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5965">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5965/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5965 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5965 Report #5964: Voice-Over Artists Just Got Worried Wed, 19 Jan 2022 14:52:04 GMT Wed, 19 Jan 2022 14:52:05 GMT <pre class="wiki">Voice-Over Artists Just Got Worried http://texvity.us/7Cxn5roNQH4dVsQqY0w5xneETHPU5apwUTaa7b14NMVbL1ymwg http://texvity.us/aJtQdWktDQ_wW1JHk6SqVtK7MW6LflfRDoAPUqaNbvN4l5vZ4A rent environments, it is a characteristic of turbidity currents. The surface of a particular bed, called the bedform, can also be indicative of a particular sedimentary environment. Examples of bed forms include dunes and ripple marks. Sole markings, such as tool marks and flute casts, are grooves eroded on a surface that are preserved by renewed sedimentation. These are often elongated structures and can be used to establish the direction of the flow during deposition. Ripple marks also form in flowing water. There can be symmetric or asymmetric. Asymmetric ripples form in environments where the current is in one direction, such as rivers. The longer flank of such ripples is on the upstream side of the current. Symmetric wave ripples occur in environments where currents reverse directions, such as tidal flats. Mudcracks are a bed form caused by the dehydration of sediment that occasionally comes above the water surface. Such structures are commonly found at tidal flats or point bars along rivers. Secondary sedimentary structures Halite crystal mold in dolomite, Paadla Formation (Silurian), Saaremaa, Estonia Secondary sedimentary structures are those which formed after deposition. Such structures form by chemical, physical and biological processes within the sediment. They can be indicators of circumstances after deposition. Some can be used as way up criteria. Organic materials in a sediment can leave more traces than just fossils. Preserved tracks and burrows are examples of trace fossils (also called ichnofossils). Such traces are relatively rare. Most trace fossils are burrows of molluscs or arthropods. This burrowing is called bioturbation by sedimentologists. It can be a valuable indic </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5964/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5964">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5964/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5964 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5964 Report #5963: Strange tribal trick heals Neuropathy FAST Wed, 19 Jan 2022 14:40:31 GMT Wed, 19 Jan 2022 14:40:31 GMT <pre class="wiki"> Strange tribal trick heals Neuropathy FAST http://herpathsy.us/8WcCCtzcFvh5yjrNPS001JJlHki0YD1is3NccV5uijPQBooIJ7s http://herpathsy.us/CKWHO7zO84uCHqx2SHketbbYM9LFwVbyEwtNp-KTNNpnWBSoDg ture a lamina forms in a rock is called lamination. Laminae are usually less than a few centimetres thick. Though bedding and lamination are often originally horizontal in nature, this is not always the case. In some environments, beds are deposited at a (usually small) angle. Sometimes multiple sets of layers with different orientations exist in the same rock, a structure called cross-bedding. Cross-bedding is characteristic of deposition by a flowing medium (wind or water). The opposite of cross-bedding is parallel lamination, where all sedimentary layering is parallel. Differences in laminations are generally caused by cyclic changes in the sediment supply, caused, for example, by seasonal changes in rainfall, temperature or biochemical activity. Laminae that represent seasonal changes (similar to tree rings) are called varves. Any sedimentary rock composed of millimeter or finer scale layers can be named with the general term laminite. When sedimentary rocks have no lamination at all, their structural character is called massive bedding. Graded bedding is a structure where beds with a smaller grain size occur on top of beds with larger grains. This structure forms when fast flowing water stops flowing. Larger, heav </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5963/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5963">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5963/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5963 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5963 Report #5962: Guess which of THESE reverses “Old Age?” (take the quiz!) Wed, 19 Jan 2022 13:24:13 GMT Wed, 19 Jan 2022 13:24:13 GMT <pre class="wiki">Guess which of THESE reverses “Old Age?” (take the quiz!) http://texvity.us/JbTLpunKGZb33_n_rf2RPlfkVC2fEoHTs9vY6gJcbh98X_AaAQ http://texvity.us/b-1rqMHj7WJUCxPIqDmgW-h2kglspfLKQqlczIP1B_4uVjRCGQ ng the three major types of rock, fossils are most commonly found in sedimentary rock. Unlike most igneous and metamorphic rocks, sedimentary rocks form at temperatures and pressures that do not destroy fossil remnants. Often these fossils may only be visible under magnification. Dead organisms in nature are usually quickly removed by scavengers, bacteria, rotting and erosion, but under exceptional circumstances, these natural processes are unable to take place, leading to fossilisation. The chance of fossilisation is higher when the sedimentation rate is high (so that a carcass is quickly buried), in anoxic environments (where little bacterial activity occurs) or when the organism had a particularly hard skeleton. Larger, well-preserved fossils are relatively rare. Burrows in a turbidite, made by crustaceans, San Vincente Formation (early Eocene) of the Ainsa Basin, southern foreland of the Pyrenees Fossils can be both the direct remains or imprints of organisms and their skeletons. Most commonly preserved are the harder parts of organisms such as bones, shells, and the woody tissue of plants. Soft tissue has a much smaller chance of being fossilized, and the preservation of soft tissue of animals older than 40 million years is very rare. Imprints of organisms made while they were still alive are called trace fossils, examples of which are burrows, footprints, etc. As a part of a sedimentary rock, fossils undergo the same diagenetic processes as does the host rock. For example, a shell consisting of calcite can dissolve while a cement of silica the </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5962/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5962">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5962/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5962 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5962 Report #5961: Herpes Virus Hiding Place Revealed! (Nobody Believed This!) Wed, 19 Jan 2022 12:30:38 GMT Wed, 19 Jan 2022 12:30:38 GMT <pre class="wiki">Herpes Virus Hiding Place Revealed! (Nobody Believed This!) http://herpathsy.us/DJOetbNlvIiLqTg1XUukzg7ZZTGHedMLNGCplKNkjbURv-sP http://herpathsy.us/5qcg2lAI9kGE4MfyHBu7qVsM4uhO-9v1VukzLI982CtUDbHv st sedimentary rocks contain either quartz (siliciclastic rocks) or calcite (carbonate rocks). In contrast to igneous and metamorphic rocks, a sedimentary rock usually contains very few different major minerals. However, the origin of the minerals in a sedimentary rock is often more complex than in an igneous rock. Minerals in a sedimentary rock may have been present in the original sediments or may formed by precipitation during diagenesis. In the second case, a mineral precipitate may have grown over an older generation of cement. A complex diagenetic history can be established by optical mineralogy, using a petrographic microscope. Carbonate rocks predominantly consist of carbonate minerals such as calcite, aragonite or dolomite. Both the cement and the clasts (including fossils and ooids) of a carbonate sedimentary rock usually consist of carbonate minerals. The mineralogy of a clastic rock is determined by the material supplied by the source area, the manner of its transport to the place of deposition and the stability of that particular mineral. The resistance of rock-forming minerals to weathering is expressed by the Goldich dissolution series. In this series, quartz is the most stable, followed by feldspar, micas, and finally other less stable minerals that are only present when little weathering has occurred. The amount of weathering depends mainly on the distance to the source area, the local climate and the time it took for the sediment to be transported to the point where it is deposite </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5961/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5961">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5961/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5961 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5961 Report #5960: Safely and naturally supercharge your hair growth Wed, 19 Jan 2022 11:57:47 GMT Wed, 19 Jan 2022 11:57:47 GMT <pre class="wiki">Safely and naturally supercharge your hair growth http://monsterfx.co/pSuE_ljalL_HIUoRILT-854A4itf8Uq0ml9S8apGlbPlvRvCNQ http://monsterfx.co/8YgxbsZzSFJMpUznB3zQX88rIJYgZwTxyvPaZWjEYKkh7F1UeQ rmines many of its large-scale properties, such as the density, porosity or permeability. The 3D orientation of the clasts is called the fabric of the rock. The size and form of clasts can be used to determine the velocity and direction of current in the sedimentary environment that moved the clasts from their origin; fine, calcareous mud only settles in quiet water while gravel and larger clasts are moved only by rapidly moving water. The grain size of a rock is usually expressed with the Wentworth scale, though alternative scales are sometimes used. The grain size can be expressed as a diameter or a volume, and is always an average value, since a rock is composed of clasts with different sizes. The statistical distribution of grain sizes is different for different rock types and is described in a property called the sorting of the rock. When all clasts are more or less of the same size, the rock is called 'well-sorted', and when there is a large spread in grain size, the rock is called 'poorly sorted'. Diagram showing the rounding and sphericity of grains The form of the clasts can reflect the origin of the rock. For example, coquina, a rock composed of clasts of broken shells, can only form in energetic water. The form of a clast can be described by using four parameters: Surface texture describes the amount of small-scale relief of the surface of a grain that is too small to influence the general shape. For example, frosted grains, which are covered with small-scale fractures, are characteristic of eolian sandstones. Rounding describes the general smoothness of the shape of a grain. Sphericity describes the degree to which the grain appr </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5960/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5960">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5960/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5960 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5960 Report #5959: Designed to keep you healthy and warm even on the coldest of days. Wed, 19 Jan 2022 11:21:06 GMT Wed, 19 Jan 2022 11:21:06 GMT <pre class="wiki">Designed to keep you healthy and warm even on the coldest of days. http://livemdpro.us/VvuMAAFMRdjmLLn99c5us4_dtiHwa8oKTNziA2pZxGSG5ewUNQ http://livemdpro.us/O996BjAnhQo1xyl3d52xcljuQoMuYu7qk5KQrUYcg_YkKhHODA rms under low oxygen (anoxic) circumstances and gives the rock a grey or greenish colour. Iron(III) oxide (Fe2O3) in a richer oxygen environment is often found in the form of the mineral hematite and gives the rock a reddish to brownish colour. In arid continental climates rocks are in direct contact with the atmosphere, and oxidation is an important process, giving the rock a red or orange colour. Thick sequences of red sedimentary rocks formed in arid climates are called red beds. However, a red colour does not necessarily mean the rock formed in a continental environment or arid climate. The presence of organic material can colour a rock black or grey. Organic material is formed from dead organisms, mostly plants. Normally, such material eventually decays by oxidation or bacterial activity. Under anoxic circumstances, however, organic material cannot decay and leaves a dark sediment, rich in organic material. This can, for example, occur at the bottom of deep seas and lakes. There is little water mixing in such environments; as a result, oxygen from surface water is not brought down, and the deposited sediment is normally a fine dark clay. Dark rocks, rich in organic material, are therefore often shales. Texture Diagram showing well-sorted (left) and poorly sorted (right) grains The size, form and orientation of clasts (the original pieces of rock) in a sediment is called its texture. The texture is a small-scale property of a rock, but determines many of its large-scale properties, such as the density, porosity or permeability. The 3D orientation of the clasts is called the fabric of the rock. The size and form of clasts can be used to determine the velocity and direction of current in the sedimentary environment that moved the clasts from their origin; fine, calcareous mud only settles in quiet water while gravel and larger clasts are moved only by rapidly moving wate </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5959/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5959">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5959/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5959 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5959 Report #5958: The ultimate thermal sock for home, sports, outdoor and other activities. Wed, 19 Jan 2022 11:16:18 GMT Wed, 19 Jan 2022 11:16:18 GMT <pre class="wiki">The ultimate thermal sock for home, sports, outdoor and other activities. http://septilin.us/vNnDtRNVlzLbds3QrOwU28ms9ebMQBoLmULsbtT4u1nr7Si- http://septilin.us/Jtg5a83x4U6G9rP034W2c4lStV-V7IcLBliqeZwhTnhGXswF ecting networks of diverse and healthy reefs, not only climate refugia, helps ensure the greatest chance of genetic diversity, which is critical for coral to adapt to new climates. A variety of conservation methods applied across marine and terrestrial threatened ecosystems makes coral adaption more likely and effective. Designating a reef as a biosphere reserve, marine park, national monument or world heritage site can offer protections. For example, Belize's barrier reef, Sian Ka'an, the Galapagos islands, Great Barrier Reef, Henderson Island, Palau and Papah?naumoku?kea Marine National Monument are world heritage sites. In Australia, the Great Barrier Reef is protected by the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, and is the subject of much legislation, including a biodiversity action plan. Australia compiled a Coral Reef Resilience Action Plan. This plan consists of adaptive management strategies, including reducing carbon footprint. A public awareness plan provides education on the "rainforests of the sea" and how people can reduce carbon emissions. Inhabitants of Ahus Island, Manus Province, Papua New Guinea, have followed a generations-old practice of restricting fishing in six areas of their reef lagoon. Their cultural traditions allow line fishing, but no net or spear fishing. Both biomass and individual fish sizes are significantly larger than in places where fishing is unrestr </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5958/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5958">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5958/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5958 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5958 Report #5957: The ultimate thermal sock for home, sports, outdoor and other activities. Wed, 19 Jan 2022 10:47:51 GMT Wed, 19 Jan 2022 10:47:51 GMT <pre class="wiki">The ultimate thermal sock for home, sports, outdoor and other activities. http://septilin.us/D61EsHTrAEtvKz2UN1d0ZKBPSbxD2nNtnxghlZvkmDp8xw02Hw http://septilin.us/pC0-_4bxWhBY88NzQe2zH9Pa5VKjJknMpKr1zXdgbzxWmrZBNw ecting networks of diverse and healthy reefs, not only climate refugia, helps ensure the greatest chance of genetic diversity, which is critical for coral to adapt to new climates. A variety of conservation methods applied across marine and terrestrial threatened ecosystems makes coral adaption more likely and effective. Designating a reef as a biosphere reserve, marine park, national monument or world heritage site can offer protections. For example, Belize's barrier reef, Sian Ka'an, the Galapagos islands, Great Barrier Reef, Henderson Island, Palau and Papah?naumoku?kea Marine National Monument are world heritage sites. In Australia, the Great Barrier Reef is protected by the Great Barrier Reef Marine Park Authority, and is the subject of much legislation, including a biodiversity action plan. Australia compiled a Coral Reef Resilience Action Plan. This plan consists of adaptive management strategies, including reducing carbon footprint. A public awareness plan provides education on the "rainforests of the sea" and how people can reduce carbon emissions. Inhabitants of Ahus Island, Manus Province, Papua New Guinea, have followed a generations-old practice of restricting fishing in six areas of their reef lagoon. Their cultural traditions allow line fishing, but no net or spear fishing. Both biomass and individual fish sizes are significantly larger than in places where fishing is unrestr </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5957/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5957">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5957/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5957 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5957 Report #5956: Order Now To Get A Special 5O% OFF Wed, 19 Jan 2022 10:25:56 GMT Wed, 19 Jan 2022 10:25:56 GMT <pre class="wiki">Order Now To Get A Special 5O% OFF http://primketo.biz/Wbkho3p4aptQ4Sr_Bcnsq-nfiSAzUmQYt-KGciA8Pe75XHhuBQ http://primketo.biz/Ubwj4xBsc3M3Me0_8rAqKiBve7FlIxngbY5L54XJLugal1bikg dimentary rocks are formed when sediment is deposited out of air, ice, wind, gravity, or water flows carrying the particles in suspension. This sediment is often formed when weathering and erosion break down a rock into loose material in a source area. The material is then transported from the source area to the deposition area. The type of sediment transported depends on the geology of the hinterland (the source area of the sediment). However, some sedimentary rocks, such as evaporites, are composed of material that form at the place of deposition. The nature of a sedimentary rock, therefore, not only depends on the sediment supply, but also on the sedimentary depositional environment in which it formed. Transformation (Diagenesis) Pressure solution at work in a clastic rock. While material dissolves at places where grains are in contact, that material may recrystallize from the solution and act as cement in open pore spaces. As a result, there is a net flow of material from areas under high stress to those under low stress, producing a sedimentary rock that is harder and more compact. Loose sand can become sandstone in this way. Main article: Diagenesis As sediments accumulate in a depositional environment, older sediments are buried by younger sediments, and they undergo diagenesis. Diagenesis includes all the chemical, physical, and biological changes, exclusive of surface weathering, undergone by a sediment after its initial deposition. This includes compaction and lithification of the sediments. Early stages of diagenesis, described as eogenesis, take place at shallow depths (a few tens of meters) and is characterized by bioturbation and mineralogical changes in the sediments, with only slight compaction. The red hematite that gives red bed sandst </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5956/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5956">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5956/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5956 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5956 Report #5955: Congratulations! You can get a $90 American Airlines gift card! Wed, 19 Jan 2022 10:16:15 GMT Wed, 19 Jan 2022 10:16:15 GMT <pre class="wiki">Congratulations! You can get a $90 American Airlines gift card! http://septilin.us/xO41H7NeTN9BeM43hHAi79SgZy3UeMVhsLR3FsJ507IqImruxw http://septilin.us/LG14UUYQGHGHC3DePuh6sFi0-Wx2NjeXY5rH88I06f669jWxRg imentary rocks can be subdivided into four groups based on the processes responsible for their formation: clastic sedimentary rocks, biochemical (biogenic) sedimentary rocks, chemical sedimentary rocks, and a fourth category for "other" sedimentary rocks formed by impacts, volcanism, and other minor processes. Clastic sedimentary rocks Main article: Clastic rock Claystone deposited in Glacial Lake Missoula, Montana, United States. Note the very fine and flat bedding, common for deposits coming from lake beds further away from the source of sediment. Clastic sedimentary rocks are composed of rock fragments (clasts) that have been cemented together. The clasts are commonly individual grains of quartz, feldspar, clay minerals, or mica. However, any type of mineral may be present. Clasts may also be lithic fragments composed of more than one mineral. Clastic sedimentary rocks are subdivided according to the dominant particle size. Most geologists use the Udden-Wentworth grain size scale and divide unconsolidated sediment into three fractions: gra classification of clastic sedimentary rocks parallels this scheme; conglomerates and breccias are made mostly of gravel, sandstones are made mostly of sand, and mudrocks are made mostly of mud. This tripartite subdivision is mirrored by the broad categories of rudites, arenites, and lutites, respectively, in older literature. The subdivision of these three broad categories is based on differences in clast shape (conglomerates and breccias), composition (sandstones), or grain size or text </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5955/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5955">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5955/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5955 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5955 Report #5954: BONUS: $50 UPS Gift Card Opportunity Wed, 19 Jan 2022 09:30:00 GMT Wed, 19 Jan 2022 09:30:00 GMT <pre class="wiki">BONUS: $50 UPS Gift Card Opportunity http://primketo.biz/HbDwturDa7YgcCynQOapN6P3l6NzBJjc6BdSVmsZ2lnUY48FUQ http://primketo.biz/aYJXnG20-BAFehWRGCNnsBXtwFjv8nnUM1kURaTQvPd40VA-nw logical detritus is transported to the place of deposition by water, wind, ice or mass movement, which are called agents of denudation. Biological detritus was formed by bodies and parts (mainly shells) of dead aquatic organisms, as well as their fecal mass, suspended in water and slowly piling up on the floor of water bodies (marine snow). Sedimentation may also occur as dissolved minerals precipitate from water solution. The sedimentary rock cover of the continents of the Earth's crust is extensive (73% of the Earth's current land surface), but sedimentary rock is estimated to be only 8% of the volume of the crust. Sedimentary rocks are only a thin veneer over a crust consisting mainly of igneous and metamorphic rocks. Sedimentary rocks are deposited in layers as strata, forming a structure called bedding. Sedimentary rocks are often deposited in large structures called sedimentary basins. Sedimentary rocks have also been found on Mars. The study of sedimentary rocks and rock strata provides information about the subsurface that is useful for civil engineering, for example in the construction of roads, houses, tunnels, canals or other structures. Sedimentary rocks are also important sources of natural resources including coal, fossil fuels, drinking water and ores. The study of the sequence of sedimentary rock strata is the main source for an understanding of the Earth's history, including palaeogeography, paleoclimatology and the history of life. The scientific discipline that studies the properties and origin of sedimentary rocks is called sedimentology. Sedimentology is part of both geology and physical geography and overlaps partly with other disciplines in the Earth sciences, suc </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5954/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5954">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5954/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5954 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5954 Report #5953: Foreclosure Home Listings Wed, 19 Jan 2022 08:45:39 GMT Wed, 19 Jan 2022 08:45:39 GMT <pre class="wiki">Foreclosure Home Listings http://survivalideas.us/7isYConCl4VaISZS6MkqwB7zvUOMDvfhWzrQjTud2xAw0g2hYA http://survivalideas.us/-lYVwSxKjxcKNzFaOWpX8hhG6ewvCQg-VtPuP_Z-UBI5kTXtSw menced as early as 1907, during which time several mining claims had been staked. This was followed by drifting, trenching and stripping of several gold-bearing veins between 1910 and 1920. A drilling program conducted by the Hudson Bay Mining and Smelting Company from 1954 to 1960 identified copper prospects. In 1964, Cominco optioned claims from Jodi Explorations and the Tuksi Mining Company. A drilling program to test copper mineralization on the Red Bluff claim was completed by Cominco in 1965. Texas Gulf Sulphur examined the area for its copper and base metal content from 1973 to 1974. Exploration of the Pickaxe Vein by Skyline Gold began in 1980 to define its gold potential. This was followed by the discovery of the Discovery Vein in 1981, which led to further drilling and the discovery of a high-grade gold vein in 1982 that became known as the 16 Vein. Surveying, drilling and trenching was carried out by Skyline Gold, Placer Development and Anaconda Canada Exploration between 1982 and 1988. The Johnny Mountain Mine commenced production in November 1988 after having been engaged in pre-production since January of that year. This small underground mine operated until August 1990 when high operating costs and low gold prices forced it to shut down. This was followed by closure of the ore mill in Septem </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5953/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5953">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5953/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5953 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5953 Report #5952: Your Chase Rewards are Here! Wed, 19 Jan 2022 08:29:53 GMT Wed, 19 Jan 2022 08:29:53 GMT <pre class="wiki">Your Chase Rewards are Here! http://cbdboost.us/dhdh6Lx1Ptra4Vej0qg6VW7uZss9-oCNiDueTOWS6BvWmDW1_w http://cbdboost.us/HcroW0ajoxzjW900uN1Ie12ioXlRCiqi9xfUnR-XzuEb_3joBg hich are in the form of pillow lavas, tuff breccias and hyaloclastite. All of these volcanoes were active in the last 150,000 years, with the latest eruption having occurred from The Volcano about 150 years ago. The remaining Iskut volcanoes are Cinder Mountain, Little Bear Mountain and the Cone Glacier, Iskut Canyon, Second Canyon, Snippaker Creek, King Creek and Tom MacKay Creek cones. Like other volcanoes in the NCVP, Hoodoo Mountain has its origins in rifting of the North American Plate caused by crustal extension. This has resulted from the Pacific Plate sliding northward along the Queen Charlotte Fault, on its way to the Aleutian subduction zone in Alaska. As the continental crust stretches, the near surface rocks fracture along steeply dipping faults parallel to the rift. Several dormant volcanoes in the NCVP are potentially active, with Hoodoo Mountain being one of many having erupted in the last 10,000 years. Tseax Cone, which last erupted about 240 years ago, is the southernmost NCVP volcano while Prindle Volcano in easternmost-central Alaska, which last erupted in the Pleistocene, is generally considered the northernmost. Structure An aerial view of a vertical grey-coloured rock column rising above sparsely vegetated slopes. The Monument is one of several hoodoos that have given Hoodoo Mountain its name. Hoodoo Mountain is one of the largest peralkaline volcanoes in the NCVP. It is a stratovolcano composed primarily of peralkaline phonolite and trachyte lava flows and hyaloclastites, although some pyroclastic rocks are also present. Its peralkalinity is unique among other volcanoes in the Iskut volcanic field, which range in composition from alkali basalt to hawaiite. Hoodoo has also been designated as a subglacial volcano due to much of the mountain having formed subglacially in the last 85,000 years. Its involvement with glaciation has resulted in several interactions with glacial ice as much as 2 kilometres (1.2 miles) thick, affording multiple examples of glaciovolcanic processes. This includes the formation of ice-margin </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5952/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5952">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5952/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5952 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5952 Report #5951: BONUS: $90 COSTCO Gift Card Opportunity Wed, 19 Jan 2022 07:44:18 GMT Wed, 19 Jan 2022 07:44:18 GMT <pre class="wiki">BONUS: $90 COSTCO Gift Card Opportunity http://cbdboost.us/dEFQjc68LVbIb8PxIcONNcwYyGrIZcp37T3YwIfGPyAPYt5pfw http://cbdboost.us/RiR0c_DB1pJ9I-mysml4mjHbfiCrKwpwRKjy7OyIaHH3aicrMQ ped summit is covered by an ice cap more than 100 metres (330 feet) thick and at least 3 kilometres (1.9 miles) in diameter. Two valley glaciers surrounding the northwestern and northeastern sides of the mountain have retreated significantly over the last hundred years. They both originate from a large icefield to the north and are the sources of two meltwater streams. These streams flow along the western and eastern sides of the volcano before draining into the Iskut River. Much of Hoodoo Mountain was formed beneath glacial ice and it has been overlain by glaciers or an ice cap throughout much of its history. The primary rock types composing the volcano are phonolite and trachyte, which were deposited during six periods of eruptive activity beginning about 85,000 years ago. Most of these eruptive periods were characterized by steady flows of lava but at least one period of explosive activity occurred as indicated by the presence of pyroclastic rocks. The latest eruptive period began about 10,000 years ago with the eruption of extensive lava flows that cover the north-central, northwestern and southeastern mountain slopes. A lava flow covering the southwestern slope may have been produced by a more recent eruption within the last couple of hundred years. Although no historical eruptions are known at Hoodoo Mountain, there have been periods of seismic activity since at least the mid-1980s, indicating possible future eruptions and volcanic hazards. Hoodoo Mountain lies in a remote area of Cassiar Land District that has undergone mineral exploration since at least the early 1900s. This exploration led to the discovery of copper, silver and gold within the Iskut River floodplain where two underground mines operated between 1988 and 1999. Geological studies have been conducted at Hoodoo Mountain since at least the 1940s, with the most detailed studies having occurred in the 1990s and 2000s. The area has a mostly cool and wet climate with heavy precipitation. As a result, a limited number of mammals live around Hoodoo Mountain. Trees of the pine and willow families form forests in the regional river valleys and on the lower slopes of the volcano. They compose one of many ecoregions that occur throughout British Columbia. Due to its remoteness, Hoodoo Mount </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5951/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5951">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5951/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5951 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5951 Report #5950: BONUS: $100 ACE HARDWARE Gift Card Opportunity Wed, 19 Jan 2022 07:30:35 GMT Wed, 19 Jan 2022 07:30:35 GMT <pre class="wiki">BONUS: $100 ACE HARDWARE Gift Card Opportunity http://survivalideas.us/gk9dMRLCRlmsXp7z3ItyDy-MZo6Cg8euDJzqOnO3cmKV4ZTxLg http://survivalideas.us/Eg1A8x_g6WfDLhWCwL0rXM6kV7th6IpZyTuf9DMX3ZFE3CtIIg doo Mountain is part of the Stikine Subprovince of the NCVP. This subprovince, confined to the Stikine region of northwestern British Columbia, includes three other volcanic centres: Heart Peaks, Level Mountain and Mount Edziza. All four volcanic centres differ petrologically and/or volumetrically from the rest of the NCVP. Heart Peaks, Level Mountain and Mount Edziza are the largest NCVP centres by volume, with the latter two having experienced volcanism for a much longer timespan than any other NCVP centre. Hoodoo Mountain, Level Mountain and Mount Edziza are the only NCVP centres that contain volcanic rocks of both mafic and intermediate to felsic composition. The highest of the four complexes is Mount Edziza at 2,786 metres (9,140 feet), followed by Level Mountain at 2,164 metres (7,100 feet), Heart Peaks at 2,012 metres (6,601 feet) and Hoodoo Mountain at 1,850 metres (6,070 feet). Hoodoo Mountain is one of ten volcanoes composing the Iskut volc </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5950/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5950">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5950/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5950 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5950 Report #5949: Fatty liver? Try THIS 60-second morning ritual to reverse it fast Tue, 18 Jan 2022 15:03:23 GMT Tue, 18 Jan 2022 15:03:23 GMT <pre class="wiki">Fatty liver? Try THIS 60-second morning ritual to reverse it fast http://godzillalive.us/Oapi0ywsG3nCV3IOLGtPwxZrjaDmhi-7BCG5mqv_0lh3Fkt_aw http://godzillalive.us/a8mnuN65RQntJlpx22xgKxRqCZ4_J6z-74yQbx22HU1yck6CZg ails that respire using a lung belong to the group Pulmonata. As traditionally defined, the Pulmonata were found to be polyphyletic in a molecular study per Jörger et al., dating from 2010. But snails with gills also form a polyphyletic group; in other words, snails with lungs and snails with gills form a number of taxonomic groups that are not necessarily more closely related to each other than they are related to some other groups. Both snails that have lungs and snails that have gills have diversified so widely over geological time that a few species with gills can be found on land and numerous species with lungs can be found in freshwater. Even a few marine species have lungs. Snails can be found in a very wide range of environments, including ditches, deserts, and the abyssal depths of the sea. Although land snails may be more familiar to laymen, marine snails constitute the majority of snail species, and have much greater diversity and a greater biomass. Numerous kinds of snail can also be found in fresh water. Most snails have thousands of microscopic tooth-like structures located on a banded ribbon-like tongue called a radula. The radula works like a file, ripping food into small pieces. Many snails are herbivorous, eating plants or rasping algae from surfaces with their radulae, though a few land species and many marine species are omnivores or predatory carnivores. Snails cannot absorb colored pigments when eating paper or cardboard so their feces are also colored. Several species of the genus Achatina and related genera are known as giant African land snails; some grow to 15 in (38 cm) from snout to tail, and weigh 1 kg (2 lb). The largest living species of sea sna </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5949/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5949">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5949/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5949 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5949 Report #5948: 60% of Top Lottery Jackpots Have These 4 Numbers in Common Tue, 18 Jan 2022 14:34:02 GMT Tue, 18 Jan 2022 14:34:02 GMT <pre class="wiki">60% of Top Lottery Jackpots Have These 4 Numbers in Common http://marketho.us/zEsyCNs0AX6ksLehcnQ-MvxiciDl6_AnASpZMf2bOOQj8JNKYA http://marketho.us/9Eqp0at1rBRONM2AwXX3LXdMqJJ-xnixpsohfbgO6kg7EM3IDQ ost molluscs have only one pair of gills, or even only a singular gill. Generally, the gills are rather like feathers in shape, although some species have gills with filaments on only one side. They divide the mantle cavity so water enters near the bottom and exits near the top. Their filaments have three kinds of cilia, one of which drives the water current through the mantle cavity, while the other two help to keep the gills clean. If the osphradia detect noxious chemicals or possibly sediment entering the mantle cavity, the gills' cilia may stop beating until the unwelcome intrusions have ceased. Each gill has an incoming blood vessel connected to the hemocoel and an outgoing one to the heart. Eating, digestion, and excretion Snail radula at work = Food = Radula = Muscles = Odontophore "belt" Members of the mollusc family use intracellular digestion to function. Most molluscs have muscular mouths with radulae, "tongues", bearing many rows of chitinous teeth, which are replaced from the rear as they wear out. The radula primarily functions to scrape bacteria and algae off rocks, and is associated with the odontophore, a cartilaginous supporting organ. The radula is unique to the molluscs and has no equivalent in any other animal. Molluscs' mouths also contain glands that secrete slimy mucus, to which the food sticks. Beating cilia (tiny "hairs") drive the mucus towards the stomach, so the mucus forms a long string called a "food string". At the tapered rear end of the stomach and projecting slightly into the hindgut is the prostyle, a backward-pointing cone of feces and mucus, which is rotated by further cilia so it acts as a bobbin, winding the mucus string onto itself. Before the mucus string reaches the prostyle, the acidity of the stomach makes the mucus less sticky and frees parti </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5948/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5948">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5948/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5948 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5948 Report #5947: Drink Your Morning Coffee Like This To Reset High Blood Sugar Tue, 18 Jan 2022 13:36:41 GMT Tue, 18 Jan 2022 13:36:41 GMT <pre class="wiki">Drink Your Morning Coffee Like This To Reset High Blood Sugar http://godzillalive.us/Aw5DqaUBTIvgSVC6vbuRCto4F_dPesWthVbaGw5zGJ0a_XaZSQ http://godzillalive.us/5l2ehGP8f9kS3YE2G2wNc6rpHaHQTnstbnWj_N37tqW8QsfXGA ails are typically purged, killed, shelled, and cooked (usually with garlic butter, chicken stock or wine), and then placed back into the shells with the butter and sauce for serving.[citation needed] Additional ingredients, such as garlic, thyme, parsley, and pine nuts, may be added. Special tongs for holding the shell and forks for extracting the meat are typically provided. Escargot are served on indented metal trays with places for six or 12 snails. In Cretan cuisine, the snails are first boiled in white wine with bay leaves, celery, and onion and then coated with flour and fried with rosemary and vinegar. In Maltese cuisine, snails (Maltese: bebbux) of the petit gris variety are simmered in red wine or ale with mint, basil and marjoram. The snails are cooked, and served in their shells. In Nagaland, the snails are prepared with axone and pork meat, especially the fats. Locally it is called 'hamok'. In Moroccan cuisine, snails, also called ''Ghlal'', are a popular street food. They are cooked in a jar filled with hot water, special spices, and herbs. After cooking, Moroccan snails are served in small bowls with their broth and consumed hot. Moroccan snails are mostly enjoyed during winter as they are believed to be beneficial for health, especially when dealing with the common cold or rheumatism. Nutritional value Like most molluscs, escargots are naturally high in protein and low in fat content. Escargots are estim </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5947/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5947">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5947/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5947 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5947 Report #5946: Flushing Trick = No More Pumping Your Septic Tank Tue, 18 Jan 2022 13:00:11 GMT Tue, 18 Jan 2022 13:00:11 GMT <pre class="wiki">Flushing Trick = No More Pumping Your Septic Tank http://marketho.us/ArxkZXuTimTXON-8thw9chjaK1wYIwZxzeqqk1Ho--aB3ggtlQ http://marketho.us/Tm4a2slsuE9KJnIgTQKKWMjw98WKzMyARaf_15VwVtOFwVbflg tains openings. In abalones there are holes in the shell used for respiration and the release of egg and sperm, in the nautilus a string of tissue called the siphuncle goes through all the chambers, and the eight plates that make up the shell of chitons are penetrated with living tissue with nerves and sensory structures. Foot File:SeaSnails.ogvPlay media A 50-second video of snails (most likely Natica chemnitzi and Cerithium stercusmuscaram) feeding on the sea floor in the Gulf of California, Puerto Peñasco, Mexico The underside consists of a muscular foot, which has adapted to different purposes in different classes. The foot carries a pair of statocysts, which act as balance sensors. In gastropods, it secretes mucus as a lubricant to aid movement. In forms having only a top shell, such as limpets, the foot acts as a sucker attaching the animal to a hard surface, and the vertical muscles clamp the shell down over it; in other molluscs, the vertical muscles pull the foot and other exposed soft parts into the shell. In bivalves, the foot is adapted for burrowing into the sediment; in cephalopods it is used for jet propulsion, and the tentacles and arms are derived from the foot. Circulatory system Most molluscs' circulatory systems are mainly open. Although molluscs are coelomates, their coeloms are reduced to fairly small spaces enclosing the heart and gonads. The main body cavity is a hemocoel through which blood and coelomic fluid circulate and which encloses most of the other internal organs. These hemocoelic spaces act as an efficient hydrostatic skeleton. The blood of these molluscs contains the respiratory pigment hemocyanin as an oxygen-carrier. The heart consists of one or more pairs of atria (auricles), which receive oxygenated blood from the gills and pump it to the ventricle, which pumps it into the aorta (main artery), which is fairly short and opens into the hemocoel. The atria of the heart also function as part of the excretory system by filtering waste products out of the blood and dumping it into the coelom as urine. A pair of nephridia ("little kidneys") to the rear of and connected to the coelom extracts any re-usable materials from the urine and dumps addit ional waste products into it, and then ejects it via tubes that disc </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5946/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5946">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5946/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5946 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5946 Report #5945: Recently divorced mother of 2 loses 71lbs with morning “ritual” (before/after pics) Tue, 18 Jan 2022 12:03:51 GMT Tue, 18 Jan 2022 12:03:51 GMT <pre class="wiki">Recently divorced mother of 2 loses 71lbs with morning “ritual” (before/after pics) http://omegahip.us/G7M2XKI582eKA0tDT_zW6y37583tkbnjGxrdv60jrb7FALo http://omegahip.us/SoRpN-Z84mjJQQduMTzu-WfvbWui5vtgm8AMjMa5Ac9HbNU odern monoplacophorans. The generalized mollusc is bilaterally symmetrical and has a single, "limpet-like" shell on top. The shell is secreted by a mantle covering the upper surface. The underside consists of a single muscular "foot". The visceral mass, or visceropallium, is the soft, nonmuscular metabolic region of the mollusc. It contains the body organs. Mantle and mantle cavity The mantle cavity, a fold in the mantle, encloses a significant amount of space. It is lined with epidermis, and is exposed, according to habitat, to sea, fresh water or air. The cavity was at the rear in the earliest molluscs, but its position now varies from group to group. The anus, a pair of osphradia (chemical sensors) in the incoming "lane", the hindmost pair of gills and the exit openings of the nephridia ("kidneys") and gonads (reproductive organs) are in the mantle cavity. The whole soft body of bivalves lies within an enlarged mantle cavity. Shell Main article: Mollusc shell The mantle edge secretes a shell (secondarily absent in a number of taxonomic groups, such as the nudibranchs) that consists of mainly chitin and conchiolin (a protein hardened with calcium carbonate), except the outermost layer, which in almost all cases is all conchiolin (see periostracum). Molluscs never use phosphate to construct their hard parts, with the questionable exception of Cobcrephora. While most mollusc shells are composed mainly of aragonite, those gastropods that lay eggs with a hard shell use calcite (sometimes with traces of aragonite) to construct the eggshells. The shell consists of three layers: the outer layer (the periostracum) made of organ </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5945/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5945">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5945/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5945 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5945 Report #5944: New 3-stage cigarette filter prevents tar from reaching lungs Tue, 18 Jan 2022 11:31:02 GMT Tue, 18 Jan 2022 11:31:02 GMT <pre class="wiki">New 3-stage cigarette filter prevents tar from reaching lungs http://memobuidr.co/XgKvMtKEwmBXmQAiQdfFCJOhPjs8mTreigzAdISZzjwYGzQWpQ http://memobuidr.co/LWx87l-EJb3SislY_qcdChgfoh94vGGFNNnHqw-0KIV7UcnrSg ibed species is difficult to estimate because of unresolved synonymy. In 1969 David Nicol estimated the probable total number of living mollusc species at 107,000 of which were about 12,000 fresh-water gastropods and 35,000 terrestrial. The Bivalvia would comprise about 14% of the total and the other five classes less than 2% of the living molluscs. In 2009, Chapman estimated the number of described living mollusc species at 85,000. Haszprunar in 2001 estimated about 93,000 named species, which include 23% of all named marine organisms. Molluscs are second only to arthropods in numbers of living animal species — far behind the arthropods' 1,113,000 but well ahead of chordates' 52,000.:?Front endpaper? About 200,000 living species in total are estimated, and 70,000 fossil species, although the total number of mollusc species ever to have existed, whether or not preserved, must be many times greater than the number alive today. Molluscs have more varied forms than any other animal phylum. They include snails, slugs and other gastropods; clams and other bivalves; squids and other cephalopods; and other lesser-known but similarly distinctive subgroups. The majority of species still live in the oceans, from the seashores to the abyssal zone, but some form a significant part of the freshwater fauna and the terrestrial ecosystems. Molluscs are extremely diverse in tropical and temperate regions, but can be found at all latitudes. About 80% of all known mollusc species are gastropods. Cephalopoda such as squid, cuttlefish, and octopuses are among the neurologically most advanced of all invertebrates. The giant squid, which until rece </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5944/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5944">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5944/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5944 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5944 Report #5943: Best-seller Japanese Patches Now Back In Stock Tue, 18 Jan 2022 11:00:35 GMT Tue, 18 Jan 2022 11:00:35 GMT <pre class="wiki">Best-seller Japanese Patches Now Back In Stock http://omegahip.us/e7Wpa2FAK80SwDIp7Ro0tAJgNU_XjO3mVXajAo20mMNKDtVA5g http://omegahip.us/O8D39o1umJTgAQI9w1rFbu3abqrBcm1UIJRxC-4gCl_yfF7Umw olluscs are the largest marine phylum, comprising about 23% of all the named marine organisms. Numerous molluscs also live in freshwater and terrestrial habitats. They are highly diverse, not just in size and anatomical structure, but also in behaviour and habitat. The phylum is typically divided into 7 or 8 taxonomic classes, of which two are entirely extinct. Cephalopod molluscs, such as squid, cuttlefish, and octopuses, are among the most neurologically advanced of all invertebrates—and either the giant squid or the colossal squid is the largest known invertebrate species. The gastropods (snails and slugs) are by far the most numerous molluscs and account for 80% of the total classified species. The three most universal features defining modern molluscs are a mantle with a significant cavity used for breathing and excretion, the presence of a radula (except for bivalves), and the structure of the nervous system. Other than these common elements, molluscs express great morphological diversity, so many textbooks base their descriptions on a "hypothetical ancestral mollusc" (see image below). This has a single, "limpet-like" shell on top, which is made of proteins and chitin reinforced with calcium carbonate, and is secreted by a mantle covering the whole upper surface. The underside of the animal consists of a single muscular "foot". Although molluscs are coelomates, the coelom tends to be small. The main body cavity is a hemocoel through which blood circulates; as such, their circulatory systems are mainly open. The "generalized" mollusc's feed </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5943/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5943">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5943/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5943 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5943 Report #5942: Electric Companies HATE This Efficient Heater Tue, 18 Jan 2022 10:38:34 GMT Tue, 18 Jan 2022 10:38:34 GMT <pre class="wiki">Electric Companies HATE This Efficient Heater http://growlean.biz/Bseurw9E4LCZ5Mitg2NhCRdTzI3lUpD2LklWA_k9_WevzwntAQ http://growlean.biz/NmBYJKOBuILu2W5h9WNWda14KPy9RmVILyw-ZLcYrvt1Qve6Pg der the fourth definition Archaeopteryx, traditionally considered one of the earliest members of Aves, is removed from this group, becoming a non-avian dinosaur instead. These proposals have been adopted by many researchers in the field of palaeontology and bird evolution, though the exact definitions applied have been inconsistent. Avialae, initially proposed to replace the traditional fossil content of Aves, is often used synonymously with the vernacular term "bird" by these researchers. Maniraping the results of a phylogenetic study by Cau, 2018. Most researchers define Avialae as branch-based clade, though definitions vary. Many authors have used a definition similar to "all theropods closer to birds than to Deinonychus", with Troodon being sometimes added as a second external specifier in case it is closer to birds than to Deinonychus. Avialae is also occasionally defined as an apomorphy-based clade (that is, one based on physical characteristics). Jacques Gauthier, who named Avialae in 1986, re-defined it in 2001 as all dinosaurs that possessed feathered wings used in flapping flight, and the birds that descended from them. Despite being currently one of the most widely used, the crown-group definition of Aves has been criticised by some researchers. Lee and Spencer (1997) argu </pre><p> <a class="attachment" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/attachment/ticket/5942/untitled-part.html" title="Attachment 'untitled-part.html' in Ticket #5942">untitled-part.html</a><span class="noprint"> <a class="trac-rawlink" href="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/raw-attachment/ticket/5942/untitled-part.html" title="Download"><img src="http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/chrome/common/download.png" alt="Download"/></a></span> </p> http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5942 http://trac.parrot.org/parrot/ticket/5942 Report y F