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Why Do Plants Use Chlorophyll For Energy Production When A Black Chemical Would Be More Efficient?

February 12, 2010 by  
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Doesn’t the fact chlorophyll reflects green light make it less efficient at absorbing energy than a darker chemical? Plants seem to be green the world over, regardless of the amount of sunlight available – why aren’t they shades of grey? (i.e. lighter in regions where there is ‘too much’ light, and darker in regions where there is less light available)

Monster Energy Shot (black / Green Bottle)?

February 3, 2010 by  
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Have you had it? Is it like a condensed version of their canned stuff?
Bonus question: How does it compare to 5 Hour Energy in your opinion?

Mortgage Brokers in Tenerife

List Some Natural And Organic Cures For “black Spot” In Roses?

January 24, 2010 by  
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This works for me. Removed any damaged leaves. I saved one of my roses with this treatment.
Use for Black Spot or White Powdery Mildew
Ingredients needed:
4 Level teaspoons or 1 1/3 tablespoons of Baking Soda
1 teaspoon of Mild Soap (Dawn, Ivory, should be biodegradable with no phosphates)
1 gallon of Water
Mix all ingredients thoroughly and keep agitated. Then spray plants.

If We Made Our Roads The Color Green Instead Of Black, Would That Help Global Warming?

January 21, 2010 by  
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Roads replace earth that absorbs most electromagnetic waves and converts them to chemical energy. The green wavelength is reflected, so my question is wouldn’t we want to send only the wavelengths that are naturally reflected instead of all of them? Understand that blacktop road absorb all wavelength at first until they bleach; and reflect most by their whitish color. Can you think of any large natural surfaces that are entirely black? Snow is white – so how will that affect global warming when it’s gone and plants arise that absorb?

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