- Nov 24, 2002
- 14,122
- 167
- 63
- 57
At the top of the page in the forum you'll find adds with links to things relevant to heavy metal. Today I saw this one and click to it:
[FONT=verdana,arial,sans-serif]Hair Test Interpretation[/FONT]
[FONT=verdana,arial,sans-serif]Identify heavy metal problems and endocrine issues with a hair test [/FONT]
[FONT=verdana,arial,sans-serif]www.noamalgam.com/hairtestbook.html[/FONT][FONT=verdana,arial,sans-serif]Ads by Google[/FONT]
The best part is that totally unrelated to heavy metal as music, but to heavy metals. In biochemistry "heavy metals" are metals which cations (positive ion charged atoms) can precipitate proteins in living beings by bonding with the proteic molecule. The most common of these metals because of its toxicity are: mercury, lead, silver, chromium, cadmium, arsenic and to some extend copper, zinc, cobalt (although these normally occur in metabolism as micro-elements).
In summary nothing to do with music, aren't keywords on the Internet wonderful?
[FONT=verdana,arial,sans-serif]Hair Test Interpretation[/FONT]
[FONT=verdana,arial,sans-serif]Identify heavy metal problems and endocrine issues with a hair test [/FONT]
[FONT=verdana,arial,sans-serif]www.noamalgam.com/hairtestbook.html[/FONT][FONT=verdana,arial,sans-serif]Ads by Google[/FONT]
The best part is that totally unrelated to heavy metal as music, but to heavy metals. In biochemistry "heavy metals" are metals which cations (positive ion charged atoms) can precipitate proteins in living beings by bonding with the proteic molecule. The most common of these metals because of its toxicity are: mercury, lead, silver, chromium, cadmium, arsenic and to some extend copper, zinc, cobalt (although these normally occur in metabolism as micro-elements).
In summary nothing to do with music, aren't keywords on the Internet wonderful?