Darren rote:
Bernd - 0% Ni content ;-)
Oh, you are some percent Ni. The 0% is likely a rounding error.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nickel#Biological_role;
Hi Darren,
I don't think there was any concern with about the floating point
arithmetic facing programmers with the 0%. Bernd was precise
Hiya. The following list is not quite up to date. Now sliding in at
#4 with 34.5% Ni is Lovina (Bali)
On Jun 14, 2009, at 5:50 PM, bernd.pa...@paulinet.de wrote:
a Ni content of 60%. That might be the record!
Hi Elton and List,
Yes, it it! Here are the top ten sorted by decreasing
The Oktibbeha Meteorite is a triple hitter for unusual meteorites and
unfortunately only a few grams are still in existence.
I believe someone asked about other meteorites which were found in entombed, in
burial mounds, etc. The Oktibbeha County, Mississippi meteorite found in 1857
in a
a Ni content of 60%. That might be the record!
Hi Elton and List,
Yes, it it! Here are the top ten sorted by decreasing nickel content:
Oktibbeha County - 60.1
Lafayette (iron) - 59.4
Dermbach - 42.1
Santa Catharina - 33.8
Tishomingo - 32.5
Twin City - 30
Lime Creek - 29.5
Willow Grove - 27.9
Hi Bernd:
I have not been able to find an average amount of Ni in humans (seems to
depend on a lot of things like what kind of oil you consume, how far from
Sudbury you live, etc.--micrograms per gram of body weight). But it is
important.
From Copperwiki:
Nickel deficiency is rare in humans as
On 14 Jun 2009 21:50:32 UT, you wrote:
Bernd - 0% Ni content ;-)
Oh, you are some percent Ni. The 0% is likely a rounding error.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nickel#Biological_role
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