Hi folk,

Marshall:

"but the body under these conditions appears to transmute sodium to
potassium."

Leading Edge Research Journal, now replaced by Leading Edge Research
Quarterly, published a few years ago two or more hard reasearch studies
regarding documented instances of biological transmutation.

One was with ordinary chickens; they were able to transmute silica to
calcium (Memory...)  The same was found in one species of ocean crab.  This
was conclusivly demonstrated by careful weighing of substance in and
substance out.

Two different researchers.  There was maybe other studies too.  From years
ago, I recall vaguly a study that said it was highly probable the the human
tonsils could acomplish similar feats.  I have only print copies of the LERJ
article, and it would probably take me a couple of hours to locate the
article.

Alchemy is real.

James-Osbourne: Holmes
  -----Original Message-----
  From: Marshall Dudley [mailto:mdud...@execonn.com]
  Sent: Friday, November 01, 2002 8:31 AM
  To: silver-list@eskimo.com
  Subject: Re: CS>CS & gatorade


  He is correct. It is salts, primarily sodium and potassium salts if I
believe for Gaterade.
  The reason one needs lots of salt when they are in a very hot environment
is not only because you tend to sweat it out.  The whole premis of the
formulation of gaterade is wrong from what I can determine.  It is my
understanding that they analyzed sweat and then made gatorade match it in
the electrolytes. They assume that what you sweat out needs to be replaced
with exactly the same thing.  Tests run in the Siberia indicate this is
incorrect.

  According to the book "Biological Transmutations" (1), one really needs
salt, sodium chloride, and lots of it under these conditions.  Then they
sweat a combination of sodium chloride and potassium chloride, with less
sodium and more potassium as you get hotter and hotter.  The reason is as
simple as it is controversial.  Many tests have been run, and every one has
supported the fact that when one is in an extremely hot environment, the
sodium intake goes up, sodium elimination goes down, and the potassium
elimination goes up without any obvious source for the potassium.  There is
lots of data to support this, and data is suppose to trump theory, which
says it is impossible, but the body under these conditions appears to
transmute sodium to potassium.  This is endothermic, and allows the body to
maintain a temperature under 100F even when wet bulb temperature is 105 or
higher, which should be an impossibility.

  Thus under those conditions, adding potassium to the intake is not only
not necessary, but can lead to heart problems since the body must not only
get rid of that potassiium chloride, but that it makes by transmuting the
soduim to potassium as well.

  Marshall

  1. Biological Transmutation, C. L. Kervran, published by Beekman
Publishers, originally published in France in 1966, tanslated to english by
Crosby Lockwood in 1971, First english publication 1980. Present edition
published 1998.

  rol...@aol.com wrote:

    There have been several mentions of taking Gatorade with CS to help the
CS  work better. I understand it is the electrolytes in the Gatorade that is
the factor. What exactly are electrolytes? My dad said it is salt.
    Thanks,
    Carol