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Gold/Mining/Energy : Gold Price Monitor
GDXJ 106.70-0.3%Dec 5 4:00 PM EST

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To: Gary H who wrote (89002)8/20/2002 8:46:11 PM
From: E. Charters  Read Replies (1) of 116796
 
They do. They bleach the pulp. The pulp itself is still an enormous disposal problem and has wrecked some fine lakes. Lake Nipissing was once the finest pickerel fishing lake in the world. It was ruined with mercury, wood chip and pulp waste by Dupont and the saw and pulp mills of the north shore.(Sturgeon Falls). Dupont in North Bay used to pay truck drivers 150 dollars a load to dump methyl mercury waste onto the ice of the lake, and keep it a secret. Methyl mercury causes Minamata disease, a neurological wasting with no cure.

Ms. Meyer's concoction is totally unecessary. If you crap in the bush, take note of the location and come back a day later. There will be nothing left. Flies and beetles will have disposed of it completely. Nature sanitizes all things by oxidization and consumption. Chlorination of such concnetrated hydrocarbons is inadvisable because of the formation of carcinogenic PCB's. Water for instance should be filtered with charcoal and sand before chlorination. Free chlorine should be about .50 PPM.
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