[100691] in Discussion of MIT-community interests
Natlaie receives a 15 million deal on Shark Tank for this product
daemon@ATHENA.MIT.EDU (Darren Johnson)
Tue Dec 12 03:09:48 2017
Date: Fri, 8 Dec 2017 09:52:24 -0500
From: "Darren Johnson" <darren_johnson@skinnsensoriallse.com>
To: <mit-talk-mtg@charon.mit.edu>
Shark Tank Update - ABC
-----> The Most Seen Episode Ever
Last nights episode of Shark Tank topped them all
All 5 judges back Megyn Butcher after she rubbed this on her face
and all her lines went away. She looks 25+ younger
IN ALL 9 SEASONS THEY RANKED IT THE BEST THEY HAVE EVER SEEN ON THE SHOW
http://www.skinnsensoriallse.com/fictitiously-prototypes/3788E6y47xA6ib2PhvVdVKyxdhVtFMuKmji0hvV0ONW9bd
Within minutes all 5 judges back it creating an all out bidding war for
this product that dissolves facial lines in just a few minutes
EP.(938)
GET YOURS NOW:
http://www.skinnsensoriallse.com/fictitiously-prototypes/3788E6y47xA6ib2PhvVdVKyxdhVtFMuKmji0hvV0ONW9bd
The entire message is an adver-tisement
Do not get these anymore
inform us:
http://www.skinnsensoriallse.com/8m98Gq64N7HY7Fb2IhvVdVKyxdhVtFMuKmji0hvV0ONW2d4/develop-pruner
a note can also be sent to: 1261 S 820 E Suite 210 American Fork, UT 84003
Exited your info from our inventory by entering your information this way
http://www.skinnsensoriallse.com/cd7X89P478yPPwb2*hvVdVKyxdhVtFMuKmji0hvV0ONW856/recalculations-Steinberg
Wolfe Dimaria > 6752 S 200 E Midvale Ut 84047-1274
The study adds to a growing body of bad news about how human activity is changing the planets climate and how dire those changes will be. But according to several outside scientists consulted by The Washington Post, while the research is well executed and intriguing, its also not yet definitive. The study is interesting and concerning, but the details need more investigation, said Ben Sanderson, a climate expert at the National Center for Atmospheric Research in Boulder, Colo.
Powerful waves pummel the surface of the Earth all the time, so experts think that pounding might fuel its movement. Covering two thirds of the planet, they are a great place to hunt for the hum. Unfortunately for researchers, however, these vast areas are widely unexplored. Station coverage in the oceans is much sparser than on land, leaving great parts of the Earth uncovered, scientists wrote in the study published in Geophysical Research Letters.
The study, by Patrick Brown and Ken Caldeira of the Carnegie Institution for Science in Stanford, Calif., examined the high powered climate change simulations, or models, that researchers use to project the future of the planet based on the physical equations that govern the behavior of the atmosphere and oceans.
However, research on volcanic eruptions suggests acoustic resonance may not be enough to explain the Earths hum. Whatever the precise cause of the hum, these new recordings can help improve our understanding of the planet itself. We already track vibrations to predict and measure earthquakes. Isolating them beneath the ocean could increase these capabilities.
In 1998, Japanese scientists successfully proved the sound was real, but it has never been captured beneath the sea before. Previous underwater recordings have been have been thwarted by competing signals from earthquakes and other ocean sounds. Geophysicists in this study used sophisticated ocean bottom seismometers to pick up and isolate the Earths hum. The very sound of the ocean itself, however, made it hard to hear the Earth.