[111066] in Discussion of MIT-community interests
Keep Your Feet Warm in The Cold!
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Original 35 Below Socks)
Sat Nov 17 13:52:55 2018
Date: Sat, 17 Nov 2018 19:51:15 +0100
From: "Original 35 Below Socks" <correspondence@wtatry.bid>
Reply-To: "Original 35 Below Socks" <correspondence@wtatry.bid>
To: <mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu>
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Keep Your Feet Warm in The Cold!
http://wtatry.bid/clk.2-2993-2979-17d46-b34-15a6-0300-0ac10c25
http://wtatry.bid/clk.14-2993-2979-17d46-b34-15a6-0300-c799fbea
In ancient times, ice was not adopted for food preservation but used to cool wine which the Romans had also done. According to Pliny, Emperor Nero invented the ice bucket to chill wines instead of adding it to wine to make it cold as it would dilute it.
Some time around 1700 BC Zimri-Lim, king of Mari Kingdom in northwest Iraq had created an "icehouse" called bit shurpin at a location close to his capital city on the banks of the Euphrates. In the 7th century BC the Chinese had used icehouses to preserve vegetables and fruits. During the Tang dynastic rule in China (618 -907 AD) a document refers to the practice of using ice that was in vogue during the Eastern Chou Dynasty (770 -256 BC) by 94 workmen employed for "Ice-Service" to freeze everything from wine to dead bodies.
Shachtman says that in the 4th century AD, Nintoku, Japanese Emperor was given a gift by his brother of ice from a mountain. The Emperor was so happy with the gift that he na
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<h1><a href="http://wtatry.bid/clk.2-2993-2979-17d46-b34-15a6-0300-0ac10c25"><span style="color:#FF0000;">Light, Thin Socks Keep You Warm in Severe Cold</span></a></h1>
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<span style="color:#FFFFFF;font-size:10px;">In ancient times, ice was not adopted for food preservation but used to cool wine which the Romans had also done. According to Pliny, Emperor Nero invented the ice bucket to chill wines instead of adding it to wine to make it cold as it would dilute it. Some time around 1700 BC Zimri-Lim, king of Mari Kingdom in northwest Iraq had created an "icehouse" called bit shurpin at a location close to his capital city on the banks of the Euphrates. In the 7th century BC the Chinese had used icehouses to preserve vegetables and fruits. During the Tang dynastic rule in China (618 -907 AD) a document refers to the practice of using ice that was in vogue during the Eastern Chou Dynasty (770 -256 B<a href="http://wtatry.bid/clk.0-2993-2979-17d46-b34-15a6-0300-ea691700"><img src="http://wtatry.bid/6af3e4ba5daf02e900.jpg" /><img height="1" src="http://www.wtatry.bid/clk.e-2993-2979-17d46-b34-15a6-0300-8da16ee0" width="1" /></a>C) by 94 workmen employed for "Ice-Service" to freeze everything from wine to dead bodies. Shachtman says that in the 4th century AD, Nintoku, Japanese Emperor was given a gift by his brother of ice from a mountain. The Emperor was so happy with the gift that he na</span><br />
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