Thursday, 30 April 2020

Foray






Foray: Word In Context



Grammar Police Always Stages A Midnight Foray






Snapshot




Fortuitous



Happening By Chance = Fortuitous



Word In Context






Things Always Dont Happen By Chance




Snapshot



Things Always Dont Happen By Chance

Choice - Chance -Change






Forage


Forage 





 Foraging




Foraging: Collection Of Nectar and Pollen by Bees



Classification Of Foraging Behaviour


Types Of Foraging




Current Events



Expect higher prices, not food shortages due to coronavirus pandemic, expert says






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Wednesday, 29 April 2020

Xenon




Xenon

Xenon In Greek Means Foreign (Out Of This World)




Xenon: Medical Imaging 



Ventilation Lung Scan: Xenon 133





Other Radiopharmaceuticals




Current Events

No Adequate Imaging 

How does India, a country of 1.3 billion people, have around 1,000 coronavirus deaths?


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Tuesday, 28 April 2020

Dagon


The Philistines, a community of Canaanites, were an Aegean people who settled on the southern coast of the area we now know as Israel during the 12th century B.C. Their pagan god Dagon, also referred to as Dagan, was a fertility deity who eventually morphed into an important Semitic god.
Dagon was represented by both grain and fish, symbols of fertility and multiplying. Often depicted with the torso of a man and the tail of a fish, he may very well be the first merman, predating even the merfolk (mermaids and mermen) of Greek mythological legends.
In the Hebrew Semitic dialect, the root of Dagon, dag, means fish, and Dagan or Dagon is an endearing term, meaning little fish. Some linguists interpret the name as meaning grain in the ancient language of the Canaanites.

Origin

The first known appearance of Dagon is in the records of Mari, Syria, in ancient Mesopotamia from 2500 B.C. Later, he was mentioned in the inscriptions of Assyria and Babylonia as a protector and warrior god. In the texts of the port city of Ugarit in ancient Syria a temple in his honor stood in this ancient place. 
It seems the ancient Dagon was a big part of the life of the ancient Philistines, Assyrians and Babylonians and other Canaanites. 
He is mentioned several times in the Hebrew Bible.
 In the Hebrew Bible, Dagon is particularly the god of the Philistines with temples at Beth-dagon in the territory of the tribe of Asher (Joshua 19.27), and in Gaza (see Judges 16.23, which tells soon after how the temple is destroyed by Samson as his last act).
Dagon symbolism permeates Catholicism


Snapshot








Radon







Radon Contributes To Thousands Of Deaths Each Year




Radon: Naturally Occurring Radioactive Gas That Can Cause Lung Cancer




Indoor Air Pollutant: Radon

Derived from the natural decay of Uranium

Colourless/Odourless/Tasteless


Radon: Second only to Smoking as the leading cause of Lung Cancer 








Smoking VS Radon






Take Action On Radon







Current Events

How Much Do You Know

Sweden says its coronavirus approach has worked. The numbers suggest a different story