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Re: Re: Conduct Electricity?

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Svetaswan,

If you talking about mercury, as in mercury in silver fillings...alone it may be

low on the list. But silver fillings are amalgam. That means they are a

mixture...and guess what else is in those silver fillings? As of the 70's, they

upped the amount of COPPER from 20 percent to 30 percent. According to Dr. Hal

Huggins, who wrote the book: " It's All In Your Head- The link between mercury

amalgams and Illness " 1983...high copper amalgam is the fastest selling amalgam

on the market. He quotes a study that states : High-copper amalgams are SO much

more chemically reactive that they give off mercury 50 times faster then

conventional amalgams (which were 3-6 % copper)

So a silver filling is silver, mercury AND copper. And we all know that copper

is an excellent conductor of electricity. This certainly explains alot, doesn't

it? These fillings destroy health, they destroy teeth, and they cause oral

galvanism..and electricity will take the path of least resistance....from a

filling in the mouth, to the brain.

And speaking of silver fillings, for those who have this on their To Do List,

please do your research well. It isn't enough just to have a mercury free

dentist to do the work, who is familiar with all the safeguards. The dentist

should have a meter to read the electrical charges in the teeth, so that the

fillings are replaced in the correct order of the charges. Doing it this way can

save one a whole lot of grief. Every tooth corresponds to organs/glands in the

body. I cannot stress how IMPORTANT this is, to make sure the dentist has the

equipt to measure the ele charges in the teeth, so they can safely remove and re

do those fillings in an order that WON " T cause the body more harm.

Lizzie

From: svetaswan@...

Date: Mon, 5 Sep 2011 00:50:19 +0000

Subject: Re: Conduct Electricity?

Hi Loni,

According to this, it does - although if this ranking is accurate, it is a

weaker conductor of electricity than several other materials.

The second column represents conductivity, I think:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrical_resistivity_and_conductivity#Resistivity\

_of_various_materials

I am surprised to see mercury relatively low on this list - below minerals like

calcium, zinc, and iron.

Here's another page that lists the thermal conductivity of various metals (it

appears that thermal conductivity corresponds to electrical conductivity). Again

- Stainless Steel seems to have a pretty low number:

http://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/thermal-conductivity-metals-d_858.html

Here's yet another page that generally cororborates things - although the

specific rankings appear to be slightly different. Again - surprised to see EVIL

mercury so low:

http://www.tibtech.com/conductivity.php

~Svetaswan

>

>

> Does Stainless Steel conduct electricity?

>

>

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thanks I think! ha

 

anything more in plain terms? Well I guess the answer is yes it does but not as

much as other metals. My husband says it does not. LOni

From: svetaswan <svetaswan@...>

Subject: Re: Conduct Electricity?

Date: Sunday, September 4, 2011, 5:50 PM

 

Hi Loni,

According to this, it does - although if this ranking is accurate, it is a

weaker conductor of electricity than several other materials.

The second column represents conductivity, I think:

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electrical_resistivity_and_conductivity#Resistivity\

_of_various_materials

I am surprised to see mercury relatively low on this list - below minerals like

calcium, zinc, and iron.

Here's another page that lists the thermal conductivity of various metals (it

appears that thermal conductivity corresponds to electrical conductivity). Again

- Stainless Steel seems to have a pretty low number:

http://www.engineeringtoolbox.com/thermal-conductivity-metals-d_858.html

Here's yet another page that generally cororborates things - although the

specific rankings appear to be slightly different. Again - surprised to see EVIL

mercury so low:

http://www.tibtech.com/conductivity.php

~Svetaswan

>

>  

> Does Stainless Steel conduct electricity?

>

>

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> I am surprised to see mercury relatively low on this list - below minerals

> like calcium, zinc, and iron.

Yes, especially since mercury *has* been used to conduct electricity

in thermostats.

Although I think the damage done to the body by mercury probably has

nothing to do with it's electrical conductivity.

Marc

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