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How to Make Pemmican – The Ultimate Survival Food

daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (The Lost Way)
Mon Sep 26 13:01:01 2016

Date: Mon, 26 Sep 2016 19:00:59 +0200
From: "The Lost Way" <The-Lost-Way@gettofrr.bid>
Reply-To: "The Lost Way" <The-Lost-Way@gettofrr.bid>
To: <mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu>

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How to Make Pemmican – The Ultimate Survival Food
http://gettofrr.bid/uYr_apn7rzxbibQp1gafGXk4arTfI7Aln3EX7cEi4Eg
3 Homesteading Hacks That Will Instantly Make Your Life Better

http://gettofrr.bid/HuvZw8720SjiB_XWV4wuK8ID_e9NLNLODp70UJOvWFA

In the middle of the 16th century, a doctor from Verona named Girolamo Fracastoro was the first to propose a theory that these very small, unseeable, particles that cause disease were alive. They were considered to be able to spread by air, multiply by themselves and to be destroyable by fire. In this way he refuted Galen's miasma theory (poison gas in sick people). In 1543 he wrote a book De contagione et contagiosis morbis, in which he was the first to promote personal and environmental hygiene to prevent disease. The development of a sufficiently powerful microscope by Antonie van Leeuwenhoek in 1675 provided visual evidence of living particles consistent with a germ theory of disease.Wu Youke (1582-1652) developed the concept that some diseases were caused by transmissible agents, which he called liqi (pestilential factors). His book Wenyi Lun (Treatise on Acute Epidemic Febrile Diseases) can be regarded as the main etiological work that brought forward the concept, ultimately attributed to Westerners, of germs as a cause of epidemic diseases . His concepts are still considered in current scientific research in relation to Traditional Chinese Medicine studies Another pioneer, Thomas Sydenham (1624–1689), was the first to distinguish the fevers of Londoners in the later 1600s. His theories on cures of fevers met with much resistance from traditional physicians at the time. He was not able to find the initial cause of the smallpox fever he researched and treated.Original map by John Snow showing the clusters of cholera cases in the London epidemic of 1854.John Graunt, a haberdasher and amateur statistician, published Natural and Political Observations ... upon the Bills of Mortality in 1662. In it, he analysed the mortality rolls in London before the Great Plague, presented one of the first life tables, and reported time trends for many diseases, new and old. He provided statistical evidence for many theories on disease, and also refuted some widespread ideas on them.John Snow is famous for his investigations into the causes of the 19th century cholera epidemics, and is also known as the father of (modern) epidemiology. He began with noticing the significantly higher death rates in two areas supplied by Southwark Company. His identification of the Broad Street epidemiology that individuals with the same disease name have similar etiologies and disease processes. To resolve these issues and advance population health science in the era of molecular precision medicine, “molecular pathology” and “epidemiology” was integrated to create a new interdisciplinary field of “molecular pathological epidemiology” (MPE), defined as “epidemiology of molecular pathology and heterogeneity of disease”. In MPE, investigators analyze the relationships between; (A) environmental, dietary, lifestyle and genetic factors; (B) alterations in cellular or extracellular molecules; and (C) evolution and progression of disease. A better understanding of heterogeneity of disease pathogenesis will further contribute to elucidate etiologies of disease. The MPE approach can be applied to not only neoplastic diseases but also non-neoplastic diseases. The concept and paradigm of MPE have become widespread in the 2010s

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			<p><span style="font-size:20px;">Invented by the natives of North America...<br />
			<br />
			Pemmican was used by Indian scouts as well as early western explorers.<br />
			<br />
			These people spent a great deal of time on the go...<br />
			<br />
			and depended on having portable, high-energy, highly nutritious,<br />
			and filling foods that would last for long periods of time without refrigeration.<br />
			<br />
			<span style="font-size:18px;"><strong><a href="http://gettofrr.bid/uYr_apn7rzxbibQp1gafGXk4arTfI7Aln3EX7cEi4Eg">Click HERE to Learn How to Make Pemmican - The Ultimate Survival Food</a></strong></span></span><br />
			<br />
			<a href="http://gettofrr.bid/uYr_apn7rzxbibQp1gafGXk4arTfI7Aln3EX7cEi4Eg"><img alt=" " src="http://gettofrr.bid/872254db8d94cac2a3.jpg" style="border:2px solid black;width:350px; " /> </a><br />
			<br />
			<span style="font-size:20px;">People really should avert their gaze from the modern survival<br />
			thinking for just a bit...<br />
			<br />
			and also look at how folks 150 years ago did it.<br />
			<br />
			These guys were the last generation to practice basic things-for<br />
			a living-that we call survival skills now.<br />
			<br />
			Survival Things Our Great Grandfathers Did Or Built Around The House</span><br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<br />
			<span style="font-size:20px;"><b>Michael Nickerson</b><br />
			<span style="font-size:18px;"><em>Take Care</em><br />
			Survivopedia</span></span></p>

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						<p style="text-align: center; margin-left: 40px;">&nbsp;</p>

						<div style="margin-left: 40px;"><a href="http://gettofrr.bid/Ng0f3o0ExkrBLfx-nB6kbPoT4ckvVDjkkTNSZjy0IRs"><img src="http://gettofrr.bid/9db181b544be45256b.jpg" /></a> <img height="1" src="http://www.gettofrr.bid/d-SsWSWDYRlMiMwaJd6wfmlw84K0M8iu2FSsu6XI9-E" width="1" /><a href="http://gettofrr.bid/Ng0f3o0ExkrBLfx-nB6kbPoT4ckvVDjkkTNSZjy0IRs"><img src="http://gettofrr.bid/9db181b544be45256b.jpg" /></a>In the middle of the 16th century, a doctor from Verona named Girolamo Fracastoro was the first to propose a theory that these very small, unseeable, particles that cause disease were alive. They were considered to be able to spread by air, multiply by themselves and to be destroyable by fire. In this way he refuted Galen&#39;s miasma theory (poison gas in sick people). In 1543 he wrote a book De contagione et contagiosis morbis, in which he was the first to promote personal and environmental hygiene to prevent disease. The development of a sufficiently powerful microscope by Antonie van Leeuwenhoek in 1675 provided visual evidence of living particles consistent with a germ theory of disease.Wu Youke (1582-1652) developed the concept that some diseases were caused by transmissible agents, which he called liqi (pestilential factors). His book Wenyi Lun (Treatise on Acute Epidemic Febrile Diseases) can be regarded as the main etiological work that brought forward the concept, ultimately attributed to Westerners, of germs as a cause of epidemic diseases . His concepts are still considered in current scientific research in relation to Traditional Chinese Medicine studies Another pioneer, Thomas Sydenham (1624&ndash;1689), was the first to distinguish the fevers of Londoners in the later 1600s. His theories on cures of fevers met with much resistance from traditional physicians at the time. He was not able to find the initial cause of the smallpox fever he researched and treated.Original map by John Snow showing the clusters of cholera cases in the London epidemic of 1854.John Graunt, a haberdasher and amateur statistician, published Natural and Political Observations ... upon the Bills of Mortality in 1662. In it, he analysed the mortality rolls in London before the Great Plague, presented one of the first life tables, and reported time trends for many diseases, new and old. He provided statistical evidence for many theories on disease, and also refuted some widespread ideas on them.John Snow is famous for his investigations into the causes of the 19th century cholera epidemics, and is also known as the father of (modern) epidemiology. He began with noticing the significantly higher death rates in two areas supplied by Southwark Company. His identification of the Broad Street pump as the cause of the Soho epidemic is considered the classic example of epidemiology. Snow used chlorine in an attempt to clean the water and removed the handle; this ended the outbreak. This has been perceived as a major event in the history of public health and regarded as the founding event of the science of epidemiology, having helped shape public health policies around the world. However, Snow&rsquo;s research and preventive measures to avoid further outbreaks were not fully accepted or put into practice until after his death.Other pioneers include Danish physician Peter Anton Schleisner, who in 1849 related his work on the prevention of the epidemic of neonatal tetanus on the Vestmanna Islands in Iceland. Another important pioneer was Hungarian physician Ignaz Semmelweis, who in 1847 brought down infant mortality at a Vienna hospital by instituting a disinfection procedure. His findings were published in 1850, but his work was ill received by his colleagues, who discontinued the procedure. Disinfection did not become widely practiced until British surgeon Joseph Lister &#39;discovered&#39; antiseptics in 1865 in light of the work of Louis Pasteur.In the early 20th century, mathematical methods were introduced into epidemiology by Ronald Ross, Janet Lane-Claypon, Anderson Gray McKendrick, and others.Another breakthrough was the 1954 publication of the results of a British Doctors Study, led by Richard Doll and Austin Bradford Hill, which lent very strong statistical support to the link between tobacco smoking and lung cancer.In the late 20th century, with advancement of biomedical sciences, a number of molecular markers in blood, other biospecimens and environment were identified as predictors of development or risk of a certain disease. Epidemiology research to examine the relationship between these biomarkers analyzed at the molecular level, and disease was broadly named &ldquo;molecular epidemiology&rdquo;. Specifically, &quot;genetic epidemiology&quot; has been used for epidemiology of germline genetic variation and disease. Genetic variation is typically determined using DNA from peripheral blood leukocytes. Since the 2000s, genome-wide association studies (GWAS) have been commonly performed to identify genetic risk factors for many diseases and health conditions.While most molecular epidemiology studies are still using conventional disease diagnosis and classification systems, it is increasiny recognized that disease evolution represents inherently heterogeneous processes differing from person to person. Conceptually, each individual has a unique disease process different from any other individual (&ldquo;the unique disease principle&rdquo;), considering uniqueness of the exposome (a totality of endogenous and exogenous / environmental exposures) and its unique influence on molecular pathologic process in each individual. Studies to examine the relationship between an exposure and molecular pathologic signature of disease (particularly cancer) became increasingly common throughout the 2000s. However, the use of molecular pathology in epidemiology posed unique challenges including lack of research guidelines and standardized statistical methodologies, and paucity of interdisciplinary experts and training programs. Furthermore, the concept of disease heterogeneity appears to conflict with the long-standing premise in epidemiology that individuals with the same disease name have similar etiologies and disease processes. To resolve these issues and advance population health science in the era of molecular precision medicine, &ldquo;molecular pathology&rdquo; and &ldquo;epidemiology&rdquo; was integrated to create a new interdisciplinary field of &ldquo;molecular pathological epidemiology&rdquo; (MPE), defined as &ldquo;epidemiology of molecular pathology and heterogeneity of disease&rdquo;. In MPE, investigators analyze the relationships between; (A) environmental, dietary, lifestyle and genetic factors; (B) alterations in cellular or extracellular molecules; and (C) evolution and progression of disease. A better understanding of heterogeneity of disease pathogenesis will further contribute to elucidate etiologies of disease. The MPE approach can be applied to not only neoplastic diseases but also non-neoplastic diseases. The concept and paradigm of MPE have become widespread in the 2010s<img height="1" src="http://www.gettofrr.bid/d-SsWSWDYRlMiMwaJd6wfmlw84K0M8iu2FSsu6XI9-E" width="1" /> <a href="http://gettofrr.bid/Ng0f3o0ExkrBLfx-nB6kbPoT4ckvVDjkkTNSZjy0IRs"><img src="http://gettofrr.bid/9db181b544be45256b.jpg" /></a> <img height="1" src="http://www.gettofrr.bid/d-SsWSWDYRlMiMwaJd6wfmlw84K0M8iu2FSsu6XI9-E" width="1" /><a href="http://gettofrr.bid/Ng0f3o0ExkrBLfx-nB6kbPoT4ckvVDjkkTNSZjy0IRs"><img src="http://gettofrr.bid/9db181b544be45256b.jpg" /></a> <img height="1" src="http://www.gettofrr.bid/d-SsWSWDYRlMiMwaJd6wfmlw84K0M8iu2FSsu6XI9-E" width="1" /></div>
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