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Noob Gragz says 'helloo'

GafferGragz

Curious entity
Not sure where this will pop up, but I hope this is the place to introduce myself.
I'm 50, single, male, father of 3, a burnout basket-case, been diagnosed within the Asperger spectre now for a year. Mind and body still healing from a life in constant stress.
I did be a member of the WrongPlanet community for a while but felt alien, I may be to far off the norm to be at home anywhere.
Interested in almost anything, as long as it has papers written about it. At the moment 'the human condition', quantum biology, cosmology, Neolithic history and more.
I learned about the quantum DNA randomizer almost two years ago, and my mind still become dizzy by the consequences. Same with the late Younger Dryas Neolithic structures.
The human condition is an everyday thing. For all of us.

Edit: I'm stumbling around at the moment, I have difficulties with pick up speed and memory due to my burnout condition. But I found a heaven in the music division adding up a long list of tunes listened to. Enjoy if you can.

Edit II: I'm fluent in Scandinavian and English, but I'm not one for grammar and correct spelling, be tolerant bc I am.
 
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Welcome. You have fascinating interests. I enjoy learning about the neolithic of the Great Lakes. There are rock structures on the bed of Lake Huron from 9,000 years ago, when the water level was 300 feet lower, that were meant to channel migrating caribou through a drive line with blinds where they could be ambushed. Plus in southern Ontario near where I used to collect fossils there are stone artifacts from 14,000 years ago. Especially prevalent on ridges above old lake beds. On one farm I found a nice Clovis spear point.
 
Welcome. You have fascinating interests. I enjoy learning about the neolithic of the Great Lakes. There are rock structures on the bed of Lake Huron from 9,000 years ago, when the water level was 300 feet lower, that were meant to channel migrating caribou through a drive line with blinds where they could be ambushed. Plus in southern Ontario near where I used to collect fossils there are stone artifacts from 14,000 years ago. Especially prevalent on ridges above old lake beds. On one farm I found a nice Clovis spear point.

Hey, yes, the clovis enigma. But I have to admit that I cant take serious the claim that the Clovis did eradicate the post ice age fauna. Anyhow the americas neolithic is a blind spot at me, the only interest thus far is the immense flood residues after the yonger dryas meltdown. In Norway btw the same hunting signatures are found of hunting caribou and elk. The Americas has so much history written in the geology, a documentary hosted by Neil Shubin is flooding my mind atm.

Edit: I love your avatar, I have found relatives of it at my birthplace, in old sea bed rocks. Trilobite
 
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Hey, yes, the clovis enigma. But I have to admit that I cant take serious the claim that the Clovis did eradicate the post ice age fauna. Anyhow the americas neolithic is a blind spot at me, the only interest thus far is the immense flood residues after the yonger dryas meltdown. In Norway btw the same hunting signatures are found of hunting caribou and elk. The Americas has so much history written in the geology, a documentary hosted by Neil Shubin is flooding my mind atm.

Edit: I love your avatar, I have found relatives of it at my birthplace, in old sea bed rocks. Trilobite
Evidently there are flood residues everywhere there was glaciation. I have seen some of this from when Lake Agassiz drained towards the Saint Lawrence. Floods from that lake ranged from 40,000 to 151,000 cubic kilometers of water. I would like to see the scablands in Oregon from the Lake Missoula floods. And there is the ancient Lake Bonneville which caused massive floods in the Snake River drainage. In Utah one can still see the wave benches from Lake Bonneville.

Trilobites are a special interest of mine. I used to collect in the Silica shale, made famous by Niles Eldridge when he traced the evolution of Phacopid trilobites through the strata to demonstrate Punctuated Equilibrium.
 
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Hi and welcome, sorry to hear you are up against burn out, hope you are taking things easy and will start to feel better gradually. It's good that you are here, I hope you will join in discussions and share your ideas and strategies.

:herb::bug::fourleaf::turtle::blossom::bee::sunflower::beetle::hibiscus:
 
Hei og velkommen skal du vaere

Det er noen andre skandinavisk talende her.

Hi and welcome
There are some other Scandinavian speakers here
 
Welcome! I had no idea something like Quantum DNA existed, so I will have a look at it some of these days. Sounds interesting.

Welcome! :)
 
Hey, understand about the burnout-basket case stuff- it's what propelled me to a diagnosis.
It takes awhile, but I think you'll pull up from the exhaustion.
Upward and onward!
 
Welcome! I had no idea something like Quantum DNA existed, so I will have a look at it some of these days. Sounds interesting.

Welcome! :)

Its down to the 3 atomic bonds between the DNA scaffolding and the DNA letters (ACTG), roughly speaking.
Two of the bonds are stable, but the 3rd is not and have a 2 state quantum wave uncertainty. The copied DNA most times equals the original, but sometimes (predictable amount) it copies according the other quantum state. 'Quantum Jitters' Could Form Basis of Evolution, Cancer

Cheers
GG
 
Trilobites are a special interest of mine. I used to collect in the Silica shale, made famous by Niles Eldridge when he traced the evolution of Phacopid trilobites through the strata to demonstrate Punctuated Equilibrium.

I've seen a documentary with samples as nice as your avatar, they was from North Africa or Asia Minor (my memory is really bad). And I seem to remember with crazy diversity at the cite. To me the most interesting part of the trilobite history is their eye evolution (or even coevolution)

Cheers
GG
 
Nitro wrote: Second place is the first loser

The story is not about who won. The story is what happened on the journey.
That is part of a quotation by a former winning NASCAR driver.
Nitro, in case you haven't noticed, is a reference to nitromethane, a motorfuel used in topfuel dragracing.

I am an active NHRA participant where at the end of each heat, no matter how well a strategy was planned or what you did all day, there are only two categories, winners and losers.
No one ever remembers the name of who came in second place ;)
 

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