Wednesday, 3 July 2013

New forensic technique may help track illegal ivory

New forensic technique may help track illegal ivory [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 1-Jul-2013
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Contact: Kim Martineau
kmartine@ldeo.columbia.edu
646-717-0134
The Earth Institute at Columbia University

Epic elephant slaughter leads scientists to develop dating tool

Nearly 25 years after an international ban was placed on ivory, African elephants are being slaughtered at a rate that could bring about their extinction this century. By allowing the trade of ivory acquired before 1989 to continue, the ban put the burden on law enforcement to distinguish between legal ivory and poached. Now, a new method for dating elephant tusks, described in the latest issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), could make it easier to enforce the ivory ban and save the African elephant from extermination say researchers. The method might also be applied to endangered rhinoceroses and other wildlife.

"We've developed a tool that allows us to determine the age of a tusk or piece of ivory, and this tells us whether it was acquired legally," said the study's lead author, Kevin Uno, a postdoctoral researcher at Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory. "Our dating method is affordable for government and law enforcement agencies and can help tackle the poaching and illegal trade crises."

Elephant tusks grow ring by ring, recording what plants the animals ate. Elephant tusks, it turns out, also record how much radioactive carbon was in the air, giving scientists a time marker for all those meals. During photosynthesis plants absorb radiocarbon put into the air by nuclear weapons testing in the 1950s and 1960s. The radiocarbon travels up the food chain, finding its way into the fingernails, hair, teeth and tusks of animals. By comparing radiocarbon levels in those tissues against the fluctuating "bomb curve" of radiocarbon in the atmosphere, forensic scientists can pinpoint when the tissues formed, and in some cases, when the animal died. The method works for tissue formed from about 1955 until the bomb curve, or concentration of carbon 14 isotopes in the air, reaches background levels, 10 to 15 years from now.

In the highly-regulated market for legal ivory, finding tusks for scientific research is not easy. With the help of a Salt Lake City zoo and several agencies in Kenya, the researchers gained access to the tusks of two elephants: Misha, euthanized at Utah's Hogle Zoo in 2008, and Amina, who died naturally at Kenya's Samburu National Preserve in 2006. Study co-author Thure Cerling, a geochemist at the University of Utah, read about Misha's death in the local newspaper and immediately called the zoo. "They told us, we can work with you because we haven't buried her yet," he said. The researchers traveled to Kenya for Amina's tusk, which they sawed into domino-sized samples under the watch of Kenya Wildlife Service.

In the lab, the researchers measured radiocarbon levels at the base of each tusk to independently calculate when the elephants died. Similar tests were done on monkey hair, hippo canines, oryx horn and elephant tail hairs to verify that the method worked across tissues of different ages. Two steps were key to getting precise ages. The researchers sampled each tusk lengthwise, along the growth ring, and used the most advanced technology--an accelerator mass spectrometer--to measure the radiocarbon. In addition, the study calculated growth rates for the teeth, which can be applied to elephant teeth in the fossil record to understand how climate and vegetation varied in Africa when humans were evolving. In other applications in wildlife forensics, the technique can be applied to rhino horns, which are intensely sought after for their perceived medicinal benefits.

The researchers' method complements a forensics tool developed at the University of Washington's Center for Conservation Biology that allows researchers to track ivory seizures back to their source. In a 2004 study in PNAS, center director Sam Wasser laid out a map of African elephant populations based on DNA from their dung that, when matched against a piece of seized ivory, could tell investigators where the ivory originated. The DNA tool has helped law enforcement identify where elephants are being poached; the new radiocarbon tool tells them when. "It can reliably tell us, is it legal ivory or not?" said Wasser, who was not involved in the study.

Elephant poaching is now at its highest level since record-keeping began in 2002, according to a 2012 report by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES). More elephants are slaughtered todayat the rate of 30,000 a year--than before the 1989 ban, experts say. Some 423,000 African elephants are left, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature's elephant database.

Much of the illegal ivory leaves Africa through Tanzania and Kenya and ends up in Asia, where it is carved into religious icons, decorative art and signature seals popular among the Chinese and Japanese. While China imports about 70 percent of the smuggled ivory, the next biggest market is the United States, where ivory is worked into the handles of guns and knives, said Richard Ruggiero, an expert at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Global seizures of illegal ivory reached a new record in 2011, at 86,000 pounds (39,000 kilograms), equaling nearly 6,000 elephants. But the magnitude of the problem is no match for law enforcement. "With poaching rising exponentially because of exploding demand we are actually losing ground," said Ruggiero.

A kilogram of ivoryabout 2.2 pounds--fetched $200 in 2004; by 2007, a kilo was worth $850. Escalating prices are driving Africa's notorious militias, including the Lord's Resistance Army in northern Uganda and south Sudan, the Shabab in Somalia and the Janjaweed of Darfur to kill elephants for tusks to buy guns, The New York Times reported last year. Organized crime is now involved in smuggling ivory out of Africa, leading former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to speak out against the problem last year. At a Senate Committee of Foreign Relations hearing last year, former U.S. Sen. John Kerry (now Clinton's successor) testified to the global security threat posed by elephant poaching.

The disappearance of the African elephant will mean more than the loss of a majestic, highly intelligent creature, ecologists say. It could change the structure of Africa's savannahs and rain forests. "They are environmental architects," said Wasser. "They keep woods down in the savannah and are the most important dispersers of seeds of rain forest trees. The central African rain forest is the second most important area on earth for capturing carbon dioxide and storing it."

###

Other authors are: Jay Quade, University of Arizona; Daniel Fisher, University of Michigan; George Wittemyer, Colorado State University; Iain Douglas-Hamilton, Save the Elephants; Samuel Andanje, Patrick Omondi and Moses Litoroh, Kenya Wildlife Service.


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New forensic technique may help track illegal ivory [ Back to EurekAlert! ] Public release date: 1-Jul-2013
[ | E-mail | Share Share ]

Contact: Kim Martineau
kmartine@ldeo.columbia.edu
646-717-0134
The Earth Institute at Columbia University

Epic elephant slaughter leads scientists to develop dating tool

Nearly 25 years after an international ban was placed on ivory, African elephants are being slaughtered at a rate that could bring about their extinction this century. By allowing the trade of ivory acquired before 1989 to continue, the ban put the burden on law enforcement to distinguish between legal ivory and poached. Now, a new method for dating elephant tusks, described in the latest issue of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), could make it easier to enforce the ivory ban and save the African elephant from extermination say researchers. The method might also be applied to endangered rhinoceroses and other wildlife.

"We've developed a tool that allows us to determine the age of a tusk or piece of ivory, and this tells us whether it was acquired legally," said the study's lead author, Kevin Uno, a postdoctoral researcher at Columbia University's Lamont-Doherty Earth Observatory. "Our dating method is affordable for government and law enforcement agencies and can help tackle the poaching and illegal trade crises."

Elephant tusks grow ring by ring, recording what plants the animals ate. Elephant tusks, it turns out, also record how much radioactive carbon was in the air, giving scientists a time marker for all those meals. During photosynthesis plants absorb radiocarbon put into the air by nuclear weapons testing in the 1950s and 1960s. The radiocarbon travels up the food chain, finding its way into the fingernails, hair, teeth and tusks of animals. By comparing radiocarbon levels in those tissues against the fluctuating "bomb curve" of radiocarbon in the atmosphere, forensic scientists can pinpoint when the tissues formed, and in some cases, when the animal died. The method works for tissue formed from about 1955 until the bomb curve, or concentration of carbon 14 isotopes in the air, reaches background levels, 10 to 15 years from now.

In the highly-regulated market for legal ivory, finding tusks for scientific research is not easy. With the help of a Salt Lake City zoo and several agencies in Kenya, the researchers gained access to the tusks of two elephants: Misha, euthanized at Utah's Hogle Zoo in 2008, and Amina, who died naturally at Kenya's Samburu National Preserve in 2006. Study co-author Thure Cerling, a geochemist at the University of Utah, read about Misha's death in the local newspaper and immediately called the zoo. "They told us, we can work with you because we haven't buried her yet," he said. The researchers traveled to Kenya for Amina's tusk, which they sawed into domino-sized samples under the watch of Kenya Wildlife Service.

In the lab, the researchers measured radiocarbon levels at the base of each tusk to independently calculate when the elephants died. Similar tests were done on monkey hair, hippo canines, oryx horn and elephant tail hairs to verify that the method worked across tissues of different ages. Two steps were key to getting precise ages. The researchers sampled each tusk lengthwise, along the growth ring, and used the most advanced technology--an accelerator mass spectrometer--to measure the radiocarbon. In addition, the study calculated growth rates for the teeth, which can be applied to elephant teeth in the fossil record to understand how climate and vegetation varied in Africa when humans were evolving. In other applications in wildlife forensics, the technique can be applied to rhino horns, which are intensely sought after for their perceived medicinal benefits.

The researchers' method complements a forensics tool developed at the University of Washington's Center for Conservation Biology that allows researchers to track ivory seizures back to their source. In a 2004 study in PNAS, center director Sam Wasser laid out a map of African elephant populations based on DNA from their dung that, when matched against a piece of seized ivory, could tell investigators where the ivory originated. The DNA tool has helped law enforcement identify where elephants are being poached; the new radiocarbon tool tells them when. "It can reliably tell us, is it legal ivory or not?" said Wasser, who was not involved in the study.

Elephant poaching is now at its highest level since record-keeping began in 2002, according to a 2012 report by the Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species (CITES). More elephants are slaughtered todayat the rate of 30,000 a year--than before the 1989 ban, experts say. Some 423,000 African elephants are left, according to the International Union for Conservation of Nature's elephant database.

Much of the illegal ivory leaves Africa through Tanzania and Kenya and ends up in Asia, where it is carved into religious icons, decorative art and signature seals popular among the Chinese and Japanese. While China imports about 70 percent of the smuggled ivory, the next biggest market is the United States, where ivory is worked into the handles of guns and knives, said Richard Ruggiero, an expert at the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service. Global seizures of illegal ivory reached a new record in 2011, at 86,000 pounds (39,000 kilograms), equaling nearly 6,000 elephants. But the magnitude of the problem is no match for law enforcement. "With poaching rising exponentially because of exploding demand we are actually losing ground," said Ruggiero.

A kilogram of ivoryabout 2.2 pounds--fetched $200 in 2004; by 2007, a kilo was worth $850. Escalating prices are driving Africa's notorious militias, including the Lord's Resistance Army in northern Uganda and south Sudan, the Shabab in Somalia and the Janjaweed of Darfur to kill elephants for tusks to buy guns, The New York Times reported last year. Organized crime is now involved in smuggling ivory out of Africa, leading former U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton to speak out against the problem last year. At a Senate Committee of Foreign Relations hearing last year, former U.S. Sen. John Kerry (now Clinton's successor) testified to the global security threat posed by elephant poaching.

The disappearance of the African elephant will mean more than the loss of a majestic, highly intelligent creature, ecologists say. It could change the structure of Africa's savannahs and rain forests. "They are environmental architects," said Wasser. "They keep woods down in the savannah and are the most important dispersers of seeds of rain forest trees. The central African rain forest is the second most important area on earth for capturing carbon dioxide and storing it."

###

Other authors are: Jay Quade, University of Arizona; Daniel Fisher, University of Michigan; George Wittemyer, Colorado State University; Iain Douglas-Hamilton, Save the Elephants; Samuel Andanje, Patrick Omondi and Moses Litoroh, Kenya Wildlife Service.


[ Back to EurekAlert! ] [ | E-mail | Share Share ]

?


AAAS and EurekAlert! are not responsible for the accuracy of news releases posted to EurekAlert! by contributing institutions or for the use of any information through the EurekAlert! system.


Source: http://www.eurekalert.org/pub_releases/2013-07/teia-nft062613.php

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Tuesday, 2 July 2013

New treatment for schizophrenia?

July 1, 2013 ? A research group led by professor Jesper Ekelund showed that by giving a very large dose of famotidine (200 mg daily), sufficient amounts of the drug are able to penetrate the so-called blood-brain barrier to affect the histamine system in the brain.

Famotidine has been used for the treatment of heartburn since the 1980s, but at regular dosing, famotidine almost does not enter the brain at all, since the brain is protected by the blood-brain barrier. By increasing the dosage five-fold the drug is able to enter the brain and affect the histamine system.

"Already after one week the symptoms of persons suffering from schizophrenia started to decrease and after four weeks of treatment the symptoms had decreased statistically significantly. The patients that participated in the study were also positively disposed towards the treatment," says Ekelund.

Thirty persons suffering from schizophrenia participated in the study. The patients had been on sickness pension for at least five years and were randomly divided into two groups, one which received famotidine and one which received placebo. All of the patients who took famotidine responded positively to the treatment while the symptoms of those who were on a placebo did not change.

Schizophrenia is the most common and severe psychotic disorder, and is the cause of at least half of all psychiatric hospital treatment days. No randomized, controlled trials in humans that test the effect of H2 blockade in schizophrenia have been published so far.

Innovation in psychiatric medication urgently needed

Since 1963, when the subsequent Nobel prize winner Arvid Carlsson showed that dopamine has a central role in psychosis, the so called dopamine-hypothesis has been central in psychosis. All presently available medications for psychosis are based around this principle. Since treatment response is all too often incomplete and side effects common, there is still a great, unmet medical need for medications with other mechanisms of action. Many other signaling substances have been the focus of attention, but so far, the brain histamine system has most widely been regarded as important only with regard to side effects of many psychosis medications.

"Famotidine shouldn't be used directly as treatment for schizophrenia until long-term use of a dose of this size has been proved safe. However, our study shows that the histamine system in the brain offers a novel approach to treating psychosis. This should lead to increased efforts by the pharmaceutical industry to develop medications based on this histamine-based mechanism," says Ekelund.

Famotidine works by blocking the histamine H2 receptor. There are important neurons in the brain that use histamine as their primary signaling substance. These neurons have an important role as regulators of other signaling substances. From animal research, it is known that by affecting the histamine system, one can also affect other signaling substances that are known to be involved in schizophrenia.

The project has already received international recognition. Katarina Meskanen, one of the members of Ekelunds research group, was awarded the Young Scientist Award of the SCNP (Scandinavian College of Neuropsychopharmacology) and the project has been awarded substantial funding (306,000 USD) from the Stanley foundation for follow-up studies.

The research group will replicate the finding through a larger, multinational study in collaboration with Karolinska Institutet in Sweden, where the study is coordinated by professor Jari Tiihonen.

Source: http://feeds.sciencedaily.com/~r/sciencedaily/top_news/top_health/~3/5ynH-ojEZuA/130701080938.htm

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Monday, 1 July 2013

Mitchell 2010 LINCOLN MKT Certified SUV near Sioux Falls, SD Brookings, SD Vern Eide Ford Lincoln for $28,945

  • White Platinum Metallic Tri-Coat
  • Charcoal Black w/Premium Leather Heated/Cooled Fro
  • F4885
  • 3.7L V6
  • 2LMHJ5AR1ABJ20383
  • Automatic 6-Speed
  • 41,557 mi.
  • AWD SUV (4 Door)

?

  • Convenience

    • Interior air filtration
    • Air conditioning with dual zone climate control
    • Rear air conditioning - With separate controls
    • AC power outlet - 1
    • Adjustable pedals - Power
    • Audio controls on steering wheel
    • Center Console - Full with covered storage
    • Exterior Parking Camera - Rear with camera
    • Multi-function remote - Trunk/hatch/door/tailgate, windows
    • Overhead console - Mini with storage
    • Power Activated Trunk/Hatch - Power liftgate
    • Power steering
    • Tilt and telescopic steering wheel
    • Transmission controls on steering wheel - Gear shift controls
    • Universal remote transmitter
    • Clock - In-radio display
    • Compass
    • External temperature display
    • Tachometer
    • Trip computer
    • Power door locks
    • Memory settings for 2 drivers
    • Driver memory seats
    • Auto-dimming mirrors - Electrochromatic, driver only
    • Power heated mirrors
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    • Power windows with 4 one-touch
    • Rear defogger
    • Remote window operation
  • Exterior

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    • 3rd Row Sunroof - Glass
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  • Interior

    • Heated drivers seat
    • 8-way power adjustable drivers seat
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    • Climate controlled - Heated
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    • Rear heat - With separate controls
    • Reclining rear seats
    • Climate controlled - Driver and passenger heated-cushion, driver and passenger heated-seatback
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    • Front seat type - Bucket
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  • Optional Equipment

    • Premium Leather Heated/Cooled Front Bucket Seats.
    • 3.39 Axle Ratio
    • GVWR: 6.350 lbs
    • Tires: P235/55R19 A/S BSW
    • Transmission: 6-Speed SelectShift (TM) Automatic
    • Wheels: 19" Premium Painted Aluminum
    • Class III Trailer Tow
    • PowerFold (TM) & Tumble 3rd Row Fold Flat Bench
    • Rapid Spec 102A - Includes Elite Package Also Includes Engine: 3.7L V6
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  • Safety

    • 4-wheel ABS brakes
    • Head airbags - Curtain 1st, 2nd and 3rd row
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  • Not all issues are reported to CARFAX. The number of owners is estimated. See the full CARFAX Report for additional information and glossary of terms.

Payment $507.50

$28,945

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EPA mileage estimates are for newly manufactured vehicles only. Your actual mileage will vary depending on how you drive and maintain your vehicle.

Before purchasing this vehicle, it is your responsibility to address any and all differences between information on this website and the actual vehicle specifications and/or any warranties offered prior to the sale of this vehicle. Vehicle data on this website is compiled from publicly available sources believed by the publisher to be reliable. Vehicle data is subject to change without notice. The publisher assumes no responsibility for errors and/or omissions in this data the compilation of this data and makes no representations express or implied to any actual or prospective purchaser of the vehicle as to the condition of the vehicle, vehicle specifications, ownership, vehicle history, equipment/accessories, price or warranties. 2010 LINCOLN near Sioux Falls, SD 2010 LINCOLN Brookings, SD

Source: http://www.verneideford.com/2010-LINCOLN-MKT-Mitchell/vd/15274656

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Alec Baldwin Apologizes for Gay Slur-Filled Twitter Rant

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It seems someone has some explaining to do.

After Alec Baldwin?s nasty war of words on Twitter Thursday night, the actor has deleted his account and is issuing an apology for the horrid, anti-gay remarks he made via the social media site.

In case you missed it, Baldwin?s apology comes on the heels of his ugly Twitter rant in which he referred to Daily Mail reporter George Stark, as a ?toxic little queen?, a ?little bitch?, and if that wasn?t enough- went so far as threatening to ?f__k (Stark) up.?

Where did all of that come from you might be asking? It seems the 30 Rock actor went off on Mr. Stark, after he reported that Baldwin?s wife Hilaria, had been tweeting ?upbeat posts? during actor James Gandolfini?s funeral service. Sorry Mrs. Baldwin, but that is a major faux pas.

Yesterday it seemed Alec put his tail between his legs when he issued this apology to media organization GLAAD, ?My ill-advised attack on George Stark of the Daily Mail had absolutely nothing to do with issues of anyone?s sexual orientation.? Adding, ?My anger was directed at Mr. Stark for blatantly lying and disseminating libelous information about my wife and her conduct at our friend?s funeral service. As someone who fights against homophobia, I apologize?I would not advocate violence against someone for being gay and I hope that my friends at GLAAD and the gay community understand that my attack on Mr. Stark in no way was the result of homophobia.?

Interesting. I wonder why he felt the need to use the term ?little queen? if it had nothing to do with one?s sexual orientation? What do you make of Baldwin?s apology? Is it worse than the things he said in the first place? Tell us your thoughts.

Source: http://feedproxy.google.com/~r/haveuheard/YTiU/~3/VOWv1OlsqDI/

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Holographic TVs Are Getting Closer To Reality

Holographic TVs Are Getting Closer To Reality

New methods for producing color holographic video are here, and they could lead to cheaper, higher res and more energy efficient TVs. Daniel Smalley, a researcher at MIT, built a holographic display with about the same resolution as a standard-definition TV, which is able to depict motion because it updates its image 30 times a second. The display is run by an optical chip that Smalley made in his lab for about $10.

To produce the hologram, Smalley and the other researchers on the project use a small crystal of lithium niobate. They create "waveguides" (channels that can confine and direct light) which each have a metal electrode to create an acoustic wave that bends and scales the light, which corresponds to one row of pixels on the display. When red, green and blue light go through the waveguides, some frequencies are filtered out while others go through and make it to the screen.

If the process can be perfected, it will be much more efficient than LCD technology and has the potential to change how TVs are made. Smalley says:

<blockquote> What?s most exciting about [the new chip] is that it?s a waveguide-based platform, which is a major departure from every other type of spatial light modulator used for holographic video right now.</blockquote

Like smell-o-vision, hologram technology has been much talked about, yet has stagnated for years in terms of consumer development. This research doesn't exactly promise anything by Christmas, but it indicates that the technology hasn't been completely abandoned, and actually has a chance of turning into something real. [MIT via DVICE]

Image courtesy of Daniel Smalley, MIT

Source: http://gizmodo.com/holographic-tvs-are-getting-closer-to-reality-628299239

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Woman Auctions Off Virginity to Pay For School

Source: http://www.thehollywoodgossip.com/2013/06/woman-auctions-off-virginity-to-pay-for-school/

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Cross-Section Bullets Are Beautiful for Something That Could Kill You

Cross-Section Bullets Are Beautiful for Something That Could Kill You

When it isn't being fired at or around you, ammunition can be kind of beautiful. We've already seen the striking beauty of exploding bullets trapped in plexiglass, but photographer Sabine Pearlman found a different, but equally awesome bullet-photography approach: cutting them in half.

Her photo series AMMO, conisists of shots of the innards of over 900 different types of ammunition, showing not only how carefully engineered and unique every different kind of bullet is, but also just how damn pretty they are up close.

Of course, there are more themes at play here than just "pretty bullets":

Pearlman?s photographs blur our preconceptions by humanizing the tools of the shooter, showing us their simplicity and aesthetic balance, their serene arrangement of part. Yet, Pearlman?s work also acts to disarm the shooter. Cloven in two and isolated from their context, they are rendered harmless. The viewer is forced to contemplate them as abstractions. composed of shapes and angles, flecks of color and texture, devoid of use.

But even with all that said, I just can't get over how some of the explosive material looks a whole hell of a lot like Cocoa Pebbles.

You can catch more of her work over on her Facebook page, or check out her portfolio over at her website.

Cross-Section Bullets Are Beautiful for Something That Could Kill You

Cross-Section Bullets Are Beautiful for Something That Could Kill You

Cross-Section Bullets Are Beautiful for Something That Could Kill You

Cross-Section Bullets Are Beautiful for Something That Could Kill You

Cross-Section Bullets Are Beautiful for Something That Could Kill You

Cross-Section Bullets Are Beautiful for Something That Could Kill You

Cross-Section Bullets Are Beautiful for Something That Could Kill You

Cross-Section Bullets Are Beautiful for Something That Could Kill You

Images ? Sabine Pearlman | Ammunition cross-sections from the series "AMMO"

Source: http://gizmodo.com/cross-section-bullets-are-beautiful-for-something-that-615919730

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