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Chemtrails And Aluminum Harm Heart, Lungs And Plants

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http://www.healthliesexposed.com/articles/article_2006_01_13_3817.shtml

 

Chemtrails And Aluminum Harm Heart, Lungs And Plants

 

1/13/06 Author: Ted Twietmeyer Source: Rense.com

 

Chemtrails which are known to contain heavy metals such as barium

oxide and aluminum oxide, are known to be a bigger problem than once

thought. Others have researched chemtrails at great length, but may

not have known about the negative effects on ecology, the environment

and human beings which have recently been discovered. This essay is

meant to create awareness, not panic.

 

Have you ever been standing at a gas station pump, waiting for your

vehicle to fill up out in the country in what you thought was clean,

fresh air? Did you also notice the top surface of the pump housing may

have been covered with rough grey dust? Much of that material can be

from chemtrail fallout from aluminum and barium oxide. What goes up,

must come down. And all of us are breathing it. Sickness almost always

visits communities within a 1-3 days after the spraying has taken

place. Headaches, coughs that won't go away, sore throats and head and

upper chest congestion are not uncommon. Your body does not want this

metal embedding itself in your respiratory tract. It becomes an irritant.

 

Recent research shows that aluminum oxide which is a heavy metal, can

do far more damage to human beings than once thought. The metal can

also affect plants, and is far more insidious than once thought.

 

EFFECTS OF ALUMINUM OXIDE ON HEART AND LUNGS

 

A paper written by Wardle, Lee, Akester and Braithwaite at Thiokol

Corp. warns of hazards from aluminum oxide nanoparticles. In their

paper they express concern that epidemiological studies suggest an

association between inhaled ambient particulate material and adverse

cardiopulmonary (heart and lungs) effects. The mechanisms related to

this toxicity are still unclear. Their paper shows methods to control

ultra-fine particles, to limit inhaled nanoparticles in humans.[1]

 

EFFECTS OF ALUMINUM ON ECOLOGY

 

Is the government silent about the negative effects of aluminum? From

the EPA website we read the following about acid effects and aluminum.

The 22 page paper contains numerous references to scientific papers

which are available at the EPA website:

 

" Acid deposition can occur in the wet or dry form and can adversely

affect aquatic resources through the acidification of water bodies and

watersheds. Acidification of aquatic ecosystems is of primary concern

because of the adverse effects of low pH and associated high aluminum

concentrations on fish and other aquatic organisms. "

 

" Aluminum which can be toxic to organisms, is soluble at low pH and is

leached from watershed soils by acidic deposition. Acidification may

affect fish in several ways. The direct physiological effects of low

pH and high aluminum include increased fish mortality, decreased

growth, and decreased reproductive potential. The mechanism of

toxicity involves impaired ion regulation at the gill. Population

losses occur frequently because of recruitment failure, specifically

due to increased mortality of early life stages. Changes at other

trophic levels may affect fish populations by altering food

availability. "

 

 

" By combining information on relevant water chemistry parameters (pH,

aluminum, calcium), fish toxicity models, and historical and current

distributions of fish populations in the lakes and streams included

dominant source of acidity in 100 percent of the acidic lakes studied.

This is in stark contrast to the West region, where none of the acidic

lakes studied were dominated by acid deposition (notably, the sample

size of lakes for this region was small to begin with).

 

For acidic streams, the Mid-Atlantic Highland region contains the

greatest proportion of streams whose acidic inputs are dominated by

acid deposition (56 percent). This contrasts with acidic streams of

Florida, where the vast majority (79 percent) are acidic primarily due

to organic acids, rather than acid deposition. By combining

information on relevant water chemistry parameters (pH, aluminum,

calcium), fish toxicity models, and historical and current

distributions of fish populations in the lakes and streams included in

the National Surface Water Survey (NSWS), NAPAP investigators

estimated the proportion of water bodies with water chemistry

conditions that are unsuitable for survival of various fish species. " [2]

 

TRANSLATION: Aluminum causes problems with fish by interfering with

the ability of gills to take oxygen from water. The aluminum works

with acidic water to create a toxic environment for wildlife in lakes

and streams. Aluminum is connected with ecological damage. And since

it's a heavy metal

 

And who is spraying the aluminum oxide everywhere at high altitude?

The government themselves. This is clearly another case of the left

hand doesn't know what the right hand is doing...or perhaps it may not

want to.

 

Other household products contain aluminum oxide such as sandpaper and

other abrasives. Billions of nanoparticles are likely to be released

when using sandpaper, which until now has been thought to be almost

harmless. The problem would be worse when an electric sander is in

use. Most people have been wearing a mask when sanding to avoid

inhaling wood dust. Now we can see that the wood dust may be the least

of our problems. And when sanding is done, there are countless

particles of aluminum dust suspended in the air for hours, and all

around the area on surfaces where sanding was taking place. Consider

how the metal impairs ion regulation in the gills of fish - what harm

will aluminum dust do deep in our lungs where there is also a thin

blood-oxygen membrane?

 

EFFECTS ON PLANT GROWTH

 

Researchers at the New Jersey Institute of Technology have

demonstrated that plants can be harmed by nanoparticles. Professor

Daniel Watts (a toxicology expert) and a post-doc Ling Yang performed

research, and reported that aluminum oxide nanoparticles in ground

water inhibited the growth of corn, cucumbers, cabbage, carrots and

soybeans. Watts warned that care must taken to prevent dispersion into

the air, where they will be carried by rain into groundwater systems

and stunt plant growth. Silicon dioxide (otherwise known as sand) had

no effect on plant health.

 

According to Watts, " There was an assumption that nanoparticles had no

effects on plants. But we have shown that seedlings can interact with

nanoparticles such as aluminum oxide., and that they can have a

harmful effect on seedlings and perhaps stunt the growth of plants. "

Watts and his post-doc grew seedlings in Petri dishes, using water

with aluminum oxide nanoparticles. After just seven days the effects

of stunted growth were measurable. [3]

 

Could aluminum also affect human fetus development via the

bloodstream? We do not yet have conclusive data on this. But

nanoparticles are used for scratch resistance coatings and sunscreen

lotions. Ironically, the Aluminum oxide is also used as environmental

catalysts used for remediating polluted soil. Exhaust systems,

chimneys or smoke stacks can mix with rainwater and snow to gradually

and irreversible pollute groundwater and soil. [3]

 

Oppenheimer wrote a paper many years ago how barium oxide and aluminum

oxide could be dispersed at very high altitude to reflect the sun's

heat back into space, would stay suspended for some period of time.

But what if he was wrong? What if chemtrail spraying is the real

source of the " greenhouse effect? " Is it merely a coincidence that

since this aggressive world-wide spraying program began, that the

poles are melting and winters are growing warmer than ever before?

 

Perhaps the true objective all along was to warm up the earth, and not

cool it.

 

Ted Twietmeyer

 

www.data4science.net

 

NOTE: Typos inside quoted remarks have been left unchanged, and are

also present in the original document.

 

REFERENCES

 

[1] Heart and lung risk factors (cardiopulmonary) See *AA1.2 on this

webpage: http://lucy.mrs.org/meetings/fall2003/program/AbstractBookAA.pdf

 

[2] http://www.epa.gov/air/sect812/appen_e.pdf

 

[3] Electronic Engineering Times December 5, 2005 Issue

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