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Harvard: Deadly Breakfast Habit Accelerates Dementia by 82%...
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Dementia trigger)
Wed Feb 5 10:45:06 2025
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Date: Wed, 5 Feb 2025 16:44:47 +0100
From: "Dementia trigger" <Dementiatrigger@brainsaviorxx.ru.com>
Reply-To: "Dementia warning" <Dementiatrigger@brainsaviorxx.ru.com>
Subject: Harvard: Deadly Breakfast Habit Accelerates Dementia by 82%...
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Harvard: Deadly Breakfast Habit Accelerates Dementia by 82%...
http://brainsaviorxx.ru.com/BoE1tPi-tNVsg3mjF0nmx569gE5Bqaq-Y1SE5ytpgd5QV1SjwA
http://brainsaviorxx.ru.com/QBCHjIQPKfP63CpEkK4-UNFAYscl0s6XQuQFCypGT_-XWzQCtQ
nce bonded, a male and female kiwi tend to live their entire lives as a monogamous couple. During the mating season, June to March, the pair call to each other at night, and meet in the nesting burrow every three days. These relationships may last for up to 20 years. They are unusual among other birds in that, along with some raptors, they have a functioning pair of ovaries. (In most birds and in platypuses, the right ovary never matures, so that only the left is functional.)
Kiwi eggs can weigh up to one-quarter the weight of the female. Usually, only one egg is laid per season. The kiwi lays one of the largest eggs in proportion to its size of any bird in the world, so even though the kiwi is about the size of a domestic chicken, it is able to lay eggs that are about six times the size of a chicken's egg. The eggs are smooth in texture, and are ivory or greenish white. The male incubates the egg, except for the great spotted kiwi, A. haastii, in which both parents are involved. The incubation period is 63–92 days. Producing the huge egg places significant physiological stress on the female; for the thirty days it takes to grow the fully developed egg, the female must eat three times her normal amount of food. Two to three days before the egg is laid there is little space left inside the female for her stomach and she is forced to fast.
It was believed that the large eggs were a trait of much larger moa-like ancestors, and that kiwi retained large eggs as an evolutionarily neutral trait as they became smaller. However, research in the early 2010s suggested that kiwi were descended from smaller flighted birds that flew to New Zealand and Madagascar, where they gave rise to kiwi and elephant birds. The large egg is instead thought to be an adaptation for precocity, enabling kiwi chicks to hatch mobile and with yolk to sustain them for two and half weeks. The large eggs would be safe in New Zealand's historical absence of egg-eating ground predators, while the mobile chicks would be able to evade chick-eating flying predato
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<p><strong>Harvard scientists warn:</strong></p>
<p>You may be skyrocketing your dementia risk... simply by <a href="http://brainsaviorxx.ru.com/BoE1tPi-tNVsg3mjF0nmx569gE5Bqaq-Y1SE5ytpgd5QV1SjwA" http:="" microsoft.com="" rel="sponsored" target="blank"><strong>putting this</strong></a> on your dinner plate.</p>
<p>Countless studies link this food to memory loss - even in people in their 50s. No wonder one in three Americans dies in a nursing home, unable to recognize their loved ones.</p>
<p>Millions of Americans <a href="http://brainsaviorxx.ru.com/BoE1tPi-tNVsg3mjF0nmx569gE5Bqaq-Y1SE5ytpgd5QV1SjwA" http:="" microsoft.com="" rel="sponsored" target="blank"><strong>eat this</strong></a> almost every single day... often without knowing the damage it does to your brain. Are you?</p>
<p><a href="http://brainsaviorxx.ru.com/BoE1tPi-tNVsg3mjF0nmx569gE5Bqaq-Y1SE5ytpgd5QV1SjwA" http:="" microsoft.com="" rel="sponsored" target="blank"><strong>Find out for yourself now...</strong></a></p>
<p><a href="http://brainsaviorxx.ru.com/BoE1tPi-tNVsg3mjF0nmx569gE5Bqaq-Y1SE5ytpgd5QV1SjwA" http:="" microsoft.com="" target="blank"><img alt="" src="http://brainsaviorxx.ru.com/c4ccd9d97ab571965b.png" /></a></p>
<p>Teresa</p>
<p>P.S. Fortunately, as soon as you STOP eating this food...</p>
<p>Your brain cells start to regenerate... protecting your precious memories... and blessing you with the crystal clear thinking you had before middle-age.</p>
<p>But first, <a href="http://brainsaviorxx.ru.com/BoE1tPi-tNVsg3mjF0nmx569gE5Bqaq-Y1SE5ytpgd5QV1SjwA" http:="" microsoft.com="" rel="sponsored" target="blank"><strong>check out what this food is</strong></a> and see if you're eating it.</p>
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<div style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:10px;">nce bonded, a male and female kiwi tend to live their entire lives as a monogamous couple. During the mating season, June to March, the pair call to each other at night, and meet in the nesting burrow every three days. These relationships may last for up to 20 years. They are unusual among other birds in that, along with some raptors, they have a functioning pair of ovaries. (In most birds and in platypuses, the right ovary never matures, so that only the left is functional.) Kiwi eggs can weigh up to one-quarter the weight of the female. Usually, only one egg is laid per season. The kiwi lays one of the largest eggs in proportion to its size of any bird in the world, so even though the kiwi is about the size of a domestic chicken, it is able to lay eggs that are about six times the size of a chicken's egg. The eggs are smooth in texture, and are ivory or greenish white. The male incubates the egg, except for the great spotted kiwi, A. haastii, in which both parents are involved. The incubation period is 63–92 days. Producing the huge egg places significant physiological stress on the female; for the thirty days it takes to grow the fully developed egg, the female must eat three times her normal amount of food. Two to three days before the egg is laid there is little space left inside the female for her stomach and she is forced to fast. It was believed that the large eggs were a trait of much larger moa-like ancestors, and that kiwi retained large eggs as an evolutionarily neutral trait as they became smaller. However, research in the early 2010s suggested that kiwi were descended from smaller flighted birds that flew to New Zealand and Madagascar, where they gave rise to kiwi and elephant birds. The large egg is instead thought to be an adaptation for precocity, enabling kiwi chicks to hatch mobile and with yolk to sustain them for two and half weeks. The large eggs would be safe in New Zealand's historical absence of egg-eating ground predators, while the mobile chicks would be able to evade chick-eating flying predato</div>
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<center><a href="http://brainsaviorxx.ru.com/RLmevAugmYhy6azLNSgMLwaodIYeVtE_-kpaZg4lTQ0UvmSyKQ" http:="" microsoft.com="" rel="sponsored" target="blank"><img http:="" microsoft.com="" src="http://brainsaviorxx.ru.com/01480d6512ae8a8947.png" /></a></center>
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