Interesting to consider the possibility that bio-transmutation might
contribute to thermo-regulation (maintaining a consistent body temperature);
and what happens when one has a fever, how is that transmutation rate
throttled up and down?  Do cold-blooded animals lack this transmutation
process???  All kinds of questions arise!

-Mark
_____________________________________________
From: Jones Beene [mailto:jone...@pacbell.net] 
Sent: Wednesday, June 06, 2012 9:09 AM
To: vortex-l@eskimo.com
Subject: [Vo]:Hydrinos and Kervran - the perfect Ni-H metaphor


Let me follow up on the following, in a new thread to address a lingering
mystery that is a perennial favorite on this list - biological transmutation
(ala Kervran's chickens)...
                
                                From: David Roberson 
                                 
                                Unfortunately, there are some serious
questions as to whether or not hydrinos exist.
                
                This is why many of us keep saying that Mills is his own
worst enemy for not following up on promises to release samples for
independent testing. He may be forced to do this if Rossi is really making
the progress he is claiming (highly doubtful).

                In "Highly Stable Novel Inorganic Hydrides"...
                http://tinyurl.com/c4nbqcu
                ... page nine - Mills claims a simple electrolysis cell can
produce a stable version of potassium hydride (a hydrino version) that does
not decompose at 600 degrees C ! Any grad student could verify that detail.
What does BLP lose by providing a few milligrams for testing, as they
indicated that they would 10 years ago? 

                BTW - the hydrogen bond corresponds to a binding energy of
22.8 eV and the KHy is ferromagnetic !  There are 5 air-tight physical
anomalies for KHy which could be verified in a day for a sample - MHD
resonance, density, decomposition temp, ferromagnetism and binding energy.

OK - keep those anomalies in mind along with the half-dozen replications of
Kervran's biological transmutation, and particularly the 1978
officially-funded effort of the U .S. Army, Fort Belvoir, Virginia ... which
positively confirmed that mechanisms for elemental transmutations could
occur in biological systems.

This was before Mills, so they did not realize how easily the explanation of
the redundancy seen in the KHy isomer (potassium hydrino) portends the
appearance of transmuted calcium 40Ca. This is, after all, simply the
addition of a proton - just like in the purported Ni-H reaction to copper,
but unlike that reaction (which should have a radioactive intermediary) the
calcium reaction does not require any emission: K+p -> Ca - which is 'clean'
since the energy lost during redundancy is being made-up via time-shifted QM
tunneling. Very elegant.

The abstract of the final Army report is S. Goldfein, Report 2247, Energy
Development from Elemental Transmutations in Biological Systems, U .S. Army
Mobility Equipment Research and Development Command, May 1978. DDC No. AD
AO56906.) and contains this: 

"The purpose of the study was to determine whether recent disclosures of
elemental transmutations occurring in biological entities have revealed new
possible sources of energy.  The works of Kervran, Komaki, and others were
surveyed, and it was concluded that, granted the existence of such
transmutations (Na to Mg, K to Ca, and Mn to Fe), then a net surplus of
energy was also produced....It was concluded that elemental transmutations
were indeed occurring in life organisms and were probably accompanied by a
net energy gain."  

This is not proof of the hydrino, but many of us find it curious that other
open-minded observers will accept Kervran (and the many replications) and at
the same time disparage Mills, when there can be little doubt that the
Mills' mechanism is the perfect fit to explain Kervran.

Jones
                




                

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