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Post by toni on Jul 14, 2010 15:31:42 GMT -5
60X magnification. I'd sure never these Collembola any where in the house before last year. Now...they're showing up dead on my window sills like no tomorrow. I can't get over how tiny this species is. And it looks like I've got a few different kinds. Be back with a video of my scope slide after I put some on under the scope.
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Post by toni on Jul 14, 2010 15:35:09 GMT -5
Overhead lighting on scope.
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Post by toni on Jul 14, 2010 15:38:02 GMT -5
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Post by toni on Jul 14, 2010 15:43:25 GMT -5
tinypic.com/player.php?v=izx4ll&s=32 min video of them on the slide under the scope at 60X mag. There seems to be several varieties. At the very end there's a "black banded one" - wonder what kind that is? ugh...
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Post by ruth on Jul 15, 2010 11:57:42 GMT -5
very interesting toni, they must have come from inside your window sill?
it is hard to know if those threads are blown around from you or if they brought the threads with them.
the flourescence is showing as is the lined up dots on the insects.
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Post by bannanny on Jul 15, 2010 12:30:57 GMT -5
Yeah ruth... I think even the tiniest creatures are now morgiefied just like us. I'll never ever stop wondering and wanting to know how it is that we feel this to such extremes when others don't... cuz it's definitely everywhere and in everything now.
hugs ~~ bannanny
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Post by toni on Jul 15, 2010 14:43:38 GMT -5
In talking about this on the phone yesterday, I couldn't at first understand "why I keep finding" dead critters, (gnats and collembola) on my window sills.
Well....it was concluded in my conversation by someone, that that makes sense, because we have an exterminator come on contract to spray the entire outside every couple of months.
So...the bugs then climb up with wall (outside to get away) and come in and die on the window sills.
But...here's what hit me today.
One of the bathrooms (downstairs) is not at all by any outside walls. A few months ago, there were many (thousands) of tiny ants that came in under the bathroom counter/sink area, and they lay there dead on the bathroom floor.
It struck me odd because I thought how and why did they "just die"? All by themselves, they just died and it had to have happened as soon as they came in.
I only say this because (it was just a feeling) that something they came in contact with is what killed them, and it wasn't any poison from trying to. (Part of me wondered IF it were the fibers, or minute particles) or something they ate or touched.
Does that make sense? And remember Godog's (Glendas) frog she'd sent me? It was completely entangled in fibers, of many colors. That WAS extremely puzzling, of how in the world could so many mulicolored fibers mumify that frog to begin with? And why? Because who ever finds dead things like a frog totally entangled in a zillion colored fibers as that frog was.
It's all just so weird.
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Post by kmarie on Jul 15, 2010 15:08:24 GMT -5
My firm belief for the Army pathology's involvement in the study is because of the ENVIRONMENTAL component involved with this disease and other diseases.
I watched several documentaries last night in reference to our environment and it all makes sense now why the Army/WAR is involved.
Insects/mites/animals are NOT morgellons in any way except for the fact that they live on Planet Earth.
The bugs/insects are having just as hard of a time as we humans, plants, rivers, oceans, and Lakes are trying to deal with this environmental genetic, chemical and other forms of pollution.
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Post by kmarie on Jul 15, 2010 15:15:35 GMT -5
That frog? \ Where is it?
and was it examined?
If so, by whom?
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Post by kmarie on Jul 15, 2010 15:22:06 GMT -5
I couldn't at first understand "why I keep finding" dead critters, (gnats and collembola) on my window sills.
It's all just so weird. It's not any weirder than reading the daily obituaries and finding dead humans who are not considered "elderly".
It's our environment affecting all life forms.
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Post by kmarie on Jul 15, 2010 15:23:23 GMT -5
The ONLY weird part (to me) is that no one is publishing this in the news. (except for the bee die off)
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Post by toni on Jul 15, 2010 15:25:10 GMT -5
I agree, the environment and or us are contaminated some how with it. Well...considering "everything is contaminated"...would answer the how part. But something we've had or been intro'ed to has caused the pedal to the metal, imho.
As for that frog that was wrapped in fibers - well... that was sent to Dr. Wymore a few days later after I took pics of it. I think that was in 2007. I don't know anything more about it.
I was most interested in: whether those fibers were inside that frogs body (the meat of it) and if they were in it's organs etc...or just wrapped all over the outside. I wish we knew something.
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Post by kmarie on Jul 15, 2010 15:28:03 GMT -5
Knowing if the fibers were INSIDE of the frog's organs would most certainly be of interest.
Will Dr. Wymore tell you anything about his findings?
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Post by toni on Jul 15, 2010 16:20:45 GMT -5
No replies, nada since then -or actually since that specimen I'd sent him, he said that it had "cells"...remember that? (the one I sent you too Kmar) and you took pics for me as that was before I had a scope that would take pictures.
If anyone knows (who IS in contact with him) will you help with questions regarding that frog with the fibers that cocooned it? Thank you.
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Post by kmarie on Jul 15, 2010 17:36:28 GMT -5
Exactly Toni.......... Please help us understand! Dr. Wymore? ??
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Post by ruth on Jul 16, 2010 11:30:27 GMT -5
well i am going to send in one more dish for species to rule out
geomyces (ear wax) then i'll believe it is synthetic biology
pulling stufff in as well as using our blood and tissues
for its' fuel, so then all plants, insects, animals are also
at risk for this transformation because of the the interbreeding
of unlike species.
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Post by zabrubon on Jul 16, 2010 13:40:01 GMT -5
Toni, great photo's. My son had a million dead flies on his bedroom carpet several days ago. We still don't know why. It was so freaky.(nothing personal here Freaky:)
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Post by toni on Jul 16, 2010 14:27:49 GMT -5
Wow Bonnie, that is weird. I guess the only good thing is that they are dead, but what is killing them. That's so odd. Thanks for sharing that too.
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Post by zabrubon on Jul 16, 2010 14:54:00 GMT -5
Toni, don't quite know what killed them The house was all closed up and me and the grandkids and dtrnlaw went out of town. Came back to find millions of dead flies.
The house was all closed up and it was at lease 90 degrees in there while we were gone. I know my daughter in law(Jenny) sprayed for centipedes in the house weeks earlier. This is an old house, do you suppose those flies birthed inside thehouse and then died from the heat?
It was really weird. Scary to see them all lying dead on the floor. Yuck.
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Post by kmarie on Jul 16, 2010 16:43:40 GMT -5
Toni, don't quite know what killed them The house was all closed up and me and the grandkids and dtrnlaw went out of town. Came back to find millions of dead flies. The house was all closed up and it was at lease 90 degrees in there while we were gone. I know my daughter in law(Jenny) sprayed for centipedes in the house weeks earlier. This is an old house, do you suppose those flies birthed inside thehouse and then died from the heat? It was really weird. Scary to see them all lying dead on the floor. Yuck. Depending on the "spray" your daughter in law used, ---- most have a lasting killing effect up to 4 weeks. So that is what killed them (IMO). When I managed apartments, we sprayed Monthly when the "killing" effect of the pesticide would wear off. So (IMO), the heat and closed up house along with the spray killed them.
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