The elements
Aubrey Matthews (paubrey@castles.com)
Thu, 3 Apr 1997 10:29:19 -0800
>RJV 4/2
>Aubrey is brain dead. I wonder if he'd do a little calculation for me.
>(Chances are he can't....)
>
>The earth is about 5 billion years old. Any Neptunium that would be on
>this planet today that nature formed would be at least that old. (Most
>likely older since the solar system was around with the matter in it
>before the planets were formed...) Aubrey, how much Neptinium would have
>had to be present 5 billion years ago on earth for 1 gram of it to be
>present on earth today? (Anyone else remember me going over this with
>Aubrey concerning element 111 (which does exist and is on modern periodic
>tables) and it's 1/2 life?)
>
>Drain Bamaged. But at least Aubrey's postings aren't sermons. Magill and
>Woodcock would learn a bit from reading Aubrey's postings. Isn't that
>sad?
You missed the point. That element was created artificially and cannot be
found anywhere else in the unverse and chance missed the chance to create
it. Spelling seems to be a problem here so don't focus too much on me. I
think "Miracle now knows how to spell protein thanks to me. See if element
111 is recongnized by the International Union of Pure and Applied Chemistry.
Aubrey