Monica Brannan
Junior Member
- Messages
- 88
One of my students took it and they got high grades on their exams. Probably just a coincidence though.
How?One of my students took it and they got high grades on their exams. Probably just a coincidence though.
I think she said it helped her brain focus in her exam or something.How?One of my students took it and they got high grades on their exams. Probably just a coincidence though.
Fascinating....I think she said it helped her brain focus in her exam or something.How?One of my students took it and they got high grades on their exams. Probably just a coincidence though.
then why are people saying it is poisonous?They must be uninformed.
I know right. They are idiots!then why are people saying it is poisonous?They must be uninformed.
It absolutely COULD be poisonous. There is no standard for manufacture, there is no control over ingredients, and there is no authority able to regulate what goes into this stuff, because it doesn't actually exist so you can make it out of whatever the hell you want.then why are people saying it is poisonous?They must be uninformed.
SourceTailings, also called mine dumps, culm dumps, slimes, tails, refuse, leach residue or slickens, are the materials left over after the process of separating the valuable fraction from the uneconomic fraction (gangue) of an ore. Tailings are distinct from overburden, which is the waste rock or other material that overlies an ore or mineral body and is displaced during mining without being processed. The amount of tailings can be large, ranging from 90–98% for some copper ores to 20–50% of the other (less valuable) minerals.