Fleironymus
Fleironymus t1_j22y8c7 wrote
Reply to Germany shrugs off Russia’s oil export ban, says move has ‘no practical significance’. by Marciu73
This is the Germany I like to see.
Fleironymus t1_izdicre wrote
Reply to comment by Areoseph in 'Compromise' NDAA boosts Space Force budget, but keeps tight reins on policy decisions by Corbulo2526
"Fancy Chief" sounds like a great new rank.
Fleironymus t1_iy7ixho wrote
Blind people are just mad at trees because they're always bumping into them.
Fleironymus t1_iw6mflj wrote
Reply to comment by pexx421 in Explaining Mercury’s Superconductivity, 111 Years Later. Theorists have finally explained the superconductivity of mercury, the first superconductor ever discovered—gaining insights that could be relevant to the search for room-temperature superconductors. by MistWeaver80
I did, but it was boring and dumb so I threw away all the proof.
Fleironymus t1_iugzcew wrote
India get your shit together.
Fleironymus t1_it1ikp8 wrote
Reply to Natural Selection Driven by the Black Death Linked to Modern-Day Autoimmune Disease: Analysis of DNA from over 200 remains shows that the Black Death selected for immune gene variants that are also risk factors for autoimmune conditions like Crohn's disease. by rjmsci
I'm curious about whether or not this finding would fit with the hygene hypothesis, or whether they could be linked somehow.
For example, if the ones that survived were statistically cleaner, could that genetic bottleneck have somehow reinforced the effects of living without parasites? Or perhaps could these concepts be related some other way?
Fleironymus t1_it1hpc8 wrote
Reply to comment by Xyvexa in Natural Selection Driven by the Black Death Linked to Modern-Day Autoimmune Disease: Analysis of DNA from over 200 remains shows that the Black Death selected for immune gene variants that are also risk factors for autoimmune conditions like Crohn's disease. by rjmsci
Nope that was all my fault.
Fleironymus t1_j5xmbyx wrote
Reply to comment by ackermann in Mycotecture — the use of mushrooms and other fungal substances for architectural purposes — could be key to building affordable, fire-resistant, insulated habitats on the Moon and Mars. NASA aims to experiment with the technique on the Moon in 2025. by clayt6
I grow cordyceps commercially and I'm out of the loop.