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From: Raymond Yohros on 23 May 2010 17:43 is there any final study on how bees are being affected by microwaves? i see skiny type bees flying on top of my cellphone behind the insect screen of the window! r.y
From: Raymond Yohros on 23 May 2010 18:25 i have seen some incredible insects lately. one had eyes that looked like two small leds that changed colors from green-yellow-red and back in about 4 seconds per cycle!!! another appear like material from one of the pine trees. can the evolving cycle of an insect be as small as years? (mutate in short time) how did the material of the tree became like that? with d material itself that felt on the soil? small lifeforms can evolve faster that big ones and changes are easier to observ. r.y
From: Raymond Yohros on 26 May 2010 19:04 On May 23, 5:25 pm, Raymond Yohros <b...(a)birdband.net> wrote: > i have seen some incredible insects lately. > > one had eyes that looked like two small > leds that changed colors from green-yellow-red > and back in about 4 seconds per cycle!!! > this is the firefly i saw: http://yaichablog.com/2008/02/29/costa-rica-journal-freaky-fireflies/ the only difference was that instead of dimming the green light it change the color to yellow and red. r.y
From: Darwin123 on 26 May 2010 22:26 On May 23, 5:43 pm, Raymond Yohros <b...(a)birdband.net> wrote: > is there any final study on how bees are being affected by microwaves? > i see skiny type bees flying on top of my cellphone behind the insect > screen of the window! > > r.y What color is the cell phone? I suspect they are responding to a visual EM stimulus (light) rather than an radio frequency EM stimulus. Bees are attracted to flowers, flowers have these bright colors to attract them. Maybe your cell phone is "rose red" or "pale yellow" or some other type of flowery looking color. The same logic applies even if your "bees" are really wasps. I suspect that by "skinny bees" you mean "hornets." Maybe the plastic of your cell phone looks like nice nesting material. Or like a male wasp. They could also respond acoustically. If the cell phone makes noise, insects could hear it. If your cell phone goes "buzz" then maybe these "bees" are looking for companionship. Maybe the cell phone sounds like a hive. I seriously doubt radio frequency EM has anything to do with it.
From: Androcles on 27 May 2010 00:03
"Darwin123" <drosen0000(a)yahoo.com> wrote in message news:49ee4c30-78a6-4b47-8c79-07aa636f00e5(a)l6g2000vbo.googlegroups.com... On May 23, 5:43 pm, Raymond Yohros <b...(a)birdband.net> wrote: > is there any final study on how bees are being affected by microwaves? > i see skiny type bees flying on top of my cellphone behind the insect > screen of the window! > > r.y What color is the cell phone? I suspect they are responding to a visual EM stimulus (light) rather than an radio frequency EM stimulus. Bees are attracted to flowers, flowers have these bright colors to attract them. Maybe your cell phone is "rose red" or "pale yellow" or some other type of flowery looking color. The same logic applies even if your "bees" are really wasps. I suspect that by "skinny bees" you mean "hornets." Maybe the plastic of your cell phone looks like nice nesting material. Or like a male wasp. They could also respond acoustically. If the cell phone makes noise, insects could hear it. If your cell phone goes "buzz" then maybe these "bees" are looking for companionship. Maybe the cell phone sounds like a hive. I seriously doubt radio frequency EM has anything to do with it. ============================================ It is common for Americans to refer to a yellowjacket as a "bee" due to its colouration http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yellow_jacket and a horntail as a wasp. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Horntail |