The Electric Universe And Health

16

This article can be found on the I-SIS website at
https://www.i-sis.org.uk/
Electrodynamic_Activities_and_Their_Role_in_Organisation_of_Body_Pattern.php

If you would like to be removed from our mailing list
unsubscribe at https://www.i-sis.org.uk/unsubscribe

or email unsubscribe@i-sis.org.uk
========================================================
ISIS Announcement 7/12/12
Electrodynamic Activities and Their Role in Organisation of Body Pattern
########################################################################

Announcing a new download from ISIS

Important paper published in 1992 now available for download in pdf
https://www.i-sis.org.uk/onlinestore/papers1.php#342

This paper reports some of the highlights of our investigations (both published
and in progress) into the role of electrodynamical activities in the
organization of body pattern in Drosophila. 1. Exposure of populations of
synchronously developing embryos for 30 minutes to weak static magnetic fields
(0.5 to 9 mT) during the first three hours of development results in a high
proportion of characteristic body pattern abnormalities in larvae which hatch 24
hours later. As the energies involved are below thermal threshold, there can be
no significant effect unless there is a high degree of cooperativity or
coherence in the pattern determination processes reacting to the external field
(Ho et al., 1991a). 2. Developing embryos show profuse electrical activities
(recorded with microelectrodes placed within the polar pockets) starting at
least as early as 40 m after fertilization and continuing well into
cellularization. The activities are highly patterned, and evolve in the course
of development. They may reflect changes in polarization of the embryonic field
associated with the coherent excitations predicted by Frohlich (1 968; 1980). 3.
Populations of synchronously developing embryos show self-emission and light
rescattering characteristics that also change with developmental time. In
addition, embryos less than 40 m old exhibit an entirely new phenomenon in the
form of intense luminescent flashes which can appear any time from one to 20
minutes, and up to 8 hours after light stimulation. These superdelayed
luminescent flashes may result from cooperative interactions among embryos
within the entire population, which serve to synchronize development to external
light as Zeitgeber (Ho et al., 199 1 b).

download here
https://www.i-sis.org.uk/onlinestore/papers1.php#342

Colours of Water - A festival of art, science, and music inspired by water
Find out more about this important event taking place in London March 2013 here
https://www.i-sis.org.uk/coloursofwater/

If you find this report useful, please support ISIS by subscribing to our 
magazine Science in Society, and encourage your friends to do so. 
https://www.i-sis.org.uk/subscribe
Or have a look at the ISIS bookstore for other publications
https://www.i-sis.org.uk/onlinestore/books.php
========================================================
This article can be found on the I-SIS website at
https://www.i-sis.org.uk/
Electrodynamic_Activities_and_Their_Role_in_Organisation_of_Body_Pattern.php

All new articles are also announced on our RSS feed
https://www.i-sis.org.uk/feed.xml

ISIS website is now archived by the British Library as part of UK national 
documentary heritage

If you like this original article from the Institute of
Science in Society, and would like to continue receiving
articles of this calibre, please consider making a donation
or purchase on our website

https://www.i-sis.org.uk/ISISappeal.php

ISIS is an independent, not-for-profit
organisation dedicated to providing critical public
information on cutting edge science, and to promoting social
accountability and ecological sustainability in science.
Posted in Uncategorized

suspended

Next Post

Adverse Drug Effects

Sat Dec 8 , 2012
The nation’s medicine chest is brimming with powerful new drugs. But each year, millions of Americans become sick or even die after adverse reactions to them. January 08, 2001|LINDA MARSA | TIMES HEALTH WRITER One little tablet forever changed Rosemary Porta’s life. The 58-year-old Pennsylvania school librarian went to her […]
//