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Subsoma

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Subsoma_Documentation. Subsoma | Just another WordPress.com site. ClimateXchange » Subsoma: Beneath the Surface. No Tags. What is Happening: CSIRO Discovery Centre in association with Powerhouse Museum and National Science Week presents An installation and artist discussionFriday 29 October 6pm to 7pm Admission free. No RSVP necessary. Subsoma explores human interaction with the environment in a performance work where seismic activity controls movement in the human body. Since the 1970s, scientists have tracked rapid uplift and subsidence of the ground and significant changes in earthquake activity. Subsoma attempts to make real these perceptually abstract external forces. The dissolution of the boundaries of self and environment created by Subsoma makes room for new construction of meaning by questioning metaphysical assumptions affirming the existence of an intentional inner self, and the physical realm as an expression and reflection of this.

Seismic data controls motor function via Electrical Muscle Stimulation (EMS). Where is it On? CSIRO Discovery Centre, Clunies Ross Street, Canberra RSVP? Earth Science (IUGG) Today at IUGG: Man v the World. Are we producing more CO2 than the planet? And could we reduce the impact of climate change through climate engineering. That’s the topic of a media briefing today at IUGG in Melbourne. You can participate in person or on line – details below. Read the full article → Published by CSIRO on 4 July 2011 Decreasing autumn and winter rainfall over southern Australia has been attributed to a 50-year decrease in the average intensity of storms in the region – a trend which is forecast to continue for another 50 years.”Our recent work on climate model projections suggests a continuation of these trends over the next 50 years.”

In an address today to the International Union of Geodesy and Geophysics conference in Melbourne, CSIRO climate scientist, Dr Jorgen Frederiksen, said these changes are due to reductions in the strength of the mid-latitude jet stream and changes in atmospheric temperatures. Here are a just a few of the speakers and topics: Muscular Bio-Stimulator (2nd Version) - RED - Page124. Circuit diagram: Parts: Comments: This circuit is a big improvement of the small Muscular Bio-Stimulator design, available on these pages since 2000. Circuit improvements are due to Bo Braendstrup, from Technical University of Denmark, and feature a very effective and much safer way to adjust output amplitude. Warning: The use of this device is forbidden to Pace-Maker bearers and pregnant women. Notes: T1 is a small mains transformer 230 to 12V @ 100 or 150mA. Disclaimer: we can't claim or prove any therapeutic effectiveness for this device.

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