Robin, John

There is more information online than I realized, indicating that bone
calcium loss does occur on deprivation, but was accounted for in the final
results.

Most curious is that 1822, Prout studied the increase of calcium carbonate
inside incubating chicken eggs, after the eggs were laid - and was able to
show that the increase was not leached from the shell. Like most of the
other experiments this one was ignored in recent times, but should be
replicated using modern methods.

In fact using only eggs for testing is an elegant way to proceed since it
eliminates a lot of potential problems with measurements and bone loss, and
one would expect the mechanism for transmutation, if there is one, to be
more active at that early, critical stage in development.

BTW - the evolution of birds goes back nearly 200 million years, so they
have had ample time to incorporate almost any advantageous survival pathway,
including CANR transmutation.

Here is a page of interest

http://www.life-enthusiast.com/ormus/orm_bio_transmut.htm





-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]   In reply to  John Berry's message:

Hi,
>You can kill a randomly selected sample first to get the average
>calcium-bone figures.

...as I said, iffy.





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