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Post by shubot on Jul 2, 2009 13:30:16 GMT -5
What is this? Please watch to the end. Is it a fungus, big nest of bugs/worms, OR a giant morgeloons from all of the morgie waste? It was found in a sewer in North Carolina....
I would really like to know your views on this.
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Post by crystalriver on Jul 2, 2009 15:22:16 GMT -5
Pretty Strange for sure Shubot--I don't know what it is
I'll see if I can find out--
CR
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awake
Full Member
For nation will rise against nation, and kingdom against kingdom.
Posts: 191
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Post by awake on Jul 2, 2009 19:16:45 GMT -5
Here it is... According to this website it is a colony of Tubifex Worms all bunched together. Sure does look strange though. It gave me the creeps because i can see how it could be related to morgellons. Certainly couldn't be to far fetched with all the "novel" organisms being recently discovered... Sounds to me the labs have been busy tinkering with DNA. www.nowpublic.com/strange/tubifex-worms-are-unknown-life-form-north-carolina-sewerAwake :
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Post by shubot on Jul 2, 2009 22:15:08 GMT -5
Thanks, Awake. Great research. It freaked me out. I feared all of the morgie people bathing and sending their bath water and more down the drains caused an accumulation to form a giant morgellon. Here is another view, but looks much different from what is in the sewer en.microcosmaquariumexplorer.com/wiki/Tubifex_WormI gather they are bred for fish food. We really do learn something new every day!
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Post by shubot on Jul 6, 2009 14:29:36 GMT -5
After doing even more research on this, I am not convinced this thing in the video is the same as the Tubifex worms... they just do not match up.
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Post by downunder on Jul 7, 2009 20:30:39 GMT -5
Tubifex - other names - sludge worms, sewage worms etc. - "bred" and used in waster water management www.abc.net.au/rn/science/earth/stories/s112647.htmI'm still going for a genetically modified silk worm with all the "instar stages". Genetically modified silk worms are used in the medical, dental, clothing arenas and many more. Fungi/ fungus gnats etc are the enemy of the silk worm and find them wherever they are - i.e. feed off them.
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Post by shubot on Jul 8, 2009 6:30:04 GMT -5
Good info, downunder...it just seems too strange to me the way the video show it lifting itself up and moving around as one big glob
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