a bird can sense electro magnetic waves to navigate during migration.
a dolphin can communicate and attack using soundwaves
a bee can process ultraviolet light.
our brains are superior to theirs. why do these concepts seem so ridiculous?
tsa you believe whatever the rednecks that you worship tell you.
fine.... you ain't shit and there is nothing special about you.
we both agree on something.
fact : the darker a color is the more light/energy is absorbed. so the greater amount of melanin in the eyes means more light is abosorbed. more of the spectrum is received.
fact: the pineal gland produces serotonin. In the central nervous system, serotonin plays an important role as a neurotransmitter in the modulation of anger, aggression, body temperature, mood, sleep, sexuality, appetite, and metabolism, as well as stimulating vomiting.
fact: melanin molecule absorbs vibrational energy such as sound and light.
more melain=more sound absorbed=more frequencies heard
fact: the pineal gland communicates information about environmental lighting to various parts of the body. light is received by the retina and signals the hypothalmus. the hypothalmus coordinates biological clock signals. from there it goes to the pineal gland where the info is distributed throughout the body.
so the pineal gland does keep you in tune with natural cycles and biorhythms.
fact:caucasians have a calcified pineal gland and very low melanin levels.
i'll stop here because TSA has trouble reading.
like i said for the 3rd time. everything has a spectrum.
i'm sure there are black people with calcified pineal glands.
trying to objectify what i'm saying is a leftbrained activity. try using the other side.
and its not black asian mexican ect ect
its people of color and people without color.
all melaniated people, animals and plants get beneficial vitamins and nutrients from the sun
non melaninated people get cancer, liverspots or just burn.
these are the facts.
and since tsa only accepts info when it comes from a white person.....
colorado state
http://www.vivo.colostate.edu/hbooks...do/pineal.html
Nat Inst Mental Health
http://www.sciencemag.org/cgi/conten...t/149/3683/542