

Does that mean that if we took something rusty and put it in an environment without oxygen it would start to release oxygen from the rust?
Does that mean that if we took something rusty and put it in an environment without oxygen it would start to release oxygen from the rust?
I’m with the other guy, I’m not reading that again, but I remember it was on the verge if that helps.
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This is a great description of nicotine addiction (I’m a vaper, but have smoked). I’d highly recommend anyone who’s considering it to not bother even if you’re impulsive and having a stressful time. Imagine adding another biological need like sleeping to your plate when after a few months all it’ll do for you is allow you to stop thinking about it for a bit. No more buzz. Just cravings and knowing where the exits are.
When I was on the fire department (late 2000s) we bought cars for like $75 each to practice disassembling, I assume from the junkyard. I bet the price hasn’t changed too much.
Contact the plaintiffs, you’ll get a much larger payout if you help them make their case rather than wait for the ruling.
I thought it was just (or mostly) partial pressure of O2 when it comes to hemoglobin? It’s been about 15 years since I was in school so I might remember wrong.