algae
Vortex Water Systems
Submitted by cybe on September 30, 2005 - 13:56This is not new technology. It has been around for centuries. The Greeks first used it around 2000BC.
This is not a water softener. Nor is it Magic. This is: State-of-the-art Water Treatment for Rural or City applications.
Used for Many Applications - Residential, Agricultural, Commercial, and Industrial.
Benefits:
* A better tasting water.
* No more ugly stains on shower walls and toilets.
* White clothes can be white again.
* Less soap and detergent required in the laundry and dishwasher.
* Hard water spots and deposits easier to clean - less chemicals required to remove.
* Will not harm septic systems
Research and development of vortex water systems for rural private wells has been conducted in the field since 1998. Lab experiments and research are conducted in Malmo, Sweden by a team of researchers. Hundreds of systems are in operation in the United States, ranging in application from private wells to apartment buildings and mobile home parks. The systems are designed to require little to no scheduled maintenance. The nature of the problem water defines system design, which can be modified to achieve desired results. Field experience and lab experiments have provided positive results in the eradication of E.coli, algae, fungus, molds, anaerobic bacteria, coliform, cryptosporidium, and legionella. The vortex process places bacteria and viruses under high pressure (hydrocyclones) followed by a vacuum, which causes them to disintegrate.
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/viktorschaubergergroup/message/1076
--- Curt Hallberg <[email protected]
The last two years I have been working with water purifyers utilising V. S. theories. Mostly it is Dan Reeses Vortex System I have tested and been trying to develop further. This has also lead to other vortex treaters for water.
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World's Marine Life Is Getting Sicker
Submitted by cybe on April 3, 2004 - 23:00"...For years, apparent increases in illness among marine creatures, from whales to coral, have left marine scientists with the uneasy suspicion that the seas are increasingly plagued by disease. Now, US researchers have uncovered the first good evidence that they are right...."
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Study: Oceans near U.S. in crisis
Submitted by cybe on July 6, 2003 - 23:00"...Bringing the oceans' ecosystems back from the edge of collapse -- one recent study found that 90 percent of the world's big fish have disappeared -- requires dramatic, controversial and expensive efforts to limit fishing, coastal development and runoff from cities and farms, according to the Pew Oceans Commission. Its report is the product of a three-year, $5.5 million study...."
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