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AntonioLao
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pool cool wool - 11-29-2007, 12:29 PM

Colloquially speaking, to deceive someone is to pull the wool over a person’s eyes. On the other hand, one way to keep cool in the hot summer months is simply to attire woolen or silken fabric. However, in the cold of winter months, only the wools can alternately serve as to keep the body warm. Before the industrial revolution of cotton gins and synthetic nylon fibers, wools were the worldwide preferred clothing materials when sheer nylon stockings still do not exist. This was more so for sheepherders at northern and southern latitudes. Consequently, the flexibility of cotton and synthetic nylon fibers, which are cheaper to produce and quicker turnaround time from raw materials to finished end products of a developing textile industry, the demand for wool has declined ever since. Nonetheless, the unique properties of wools: lightweight and breath-ability can hardly be imitated.

Microscopic examination of the fleece will clearly reveal microfiber pooling and weaving at the molecular magnetic domains. The same pooled insulating property shared by penguins, seals, and whales as warm-blooded mammals of the frigid arctic and Antarctic seas. In contrast to bioelectricity, this is the property of biomagnetism.

For the earth, its geomagnetism shields it from the harmful radiations of cosmic rays and ultraviolet rays from interstellar region and from the sun. In addition, geomagnetism working together with the planet’s atmosphere keeps heat from escaping. In a sense, the pool cool wool of a planet is its atmosphere, where and when the different beneficial gases pool together either to cool or to warm its surface.


Time independence: [∂E(g)]²=[∂F(a)×∂r(a)]·[∂F(b)×∂r(b)] and Mass independence: a(tr(t)=c²
  
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