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Melanin is found everywhere, throughout Nature...
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in animals, plants (that's why raisins
and banana bruises are brown), the soil, waters of creeks, lakes,
seas, and even in comets! Concentrations vary from parts per
million to parts per billion, and it is soluble in liquid phases.
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Melanin is necessary for humans to reproduce!
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Melanin is abundantly present at the
inception of life: a Melanin sheath covers both the sperm and
the egg! In the human embryo, the melanocytes (skin pigment cells),
the brain, and the nerve cells all originate from the same place;
the neural crest. Melanocytes resemble nerve cells and are essential
for conveying energy. When the presence of Melanin is missing
or insufficient in the ectoderm, this causes the mother to lose
her baby; in the case of all whites, a defective baby is produced.
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Melanin is the major organizing molecule in living
systems
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Dr. Frank Barr, pioneering discoverer
of Melanin's organizing ability and other properties, opens his
technical work, Melanin: The Organizing Molecule: "The hypothesis
is advanced that (neuro)melanin (in conjunction with other pigment
molecules such as the isopentenoids) functions as the major organizational
molecule in living systems. Melanin is depicted as an organizational
"trigger" capable of using established properties such
as photon- (electron)- photon conversions, free radical-redox
mechanism, ion exchange mechanisms, ion exchange mechanisms,
and semiconductive switching capabilities to direct energy to
strategic molecular systems and sensitive hierarchies of protein
enzyme cascades. Melanin is held capable of regulating a wide
range of molecular interactions and metabolic processes..."
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Melanin's Main Properties: It absorbs, stores &
transforms energy. It has "black hole" properties.
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- Black Melanin can convert light
energy to sound energy and back again!
- Melanin is BLACK because its chemical
structure allows no energy to escape. It is also Black because
Black is the perfect absorber of light and all energy frequencies,
making Black Melanin the super absorber of Energy and
Light! Thus scientists describe it as acting like a "black
hole."
- Melanin
can rearrange its chemical structure to absorb ALL energy across
the radiant energy spectrum (sunlight, X-rays, music, sound,
radar, radio waves...) and can transmute and store this
energy for later use!
- Melanin
can absorb a great amount of energy and yet not produce a tremendous
amount of heat when it absorbs this energy, because it can transform
harmful energy into useful energy. According to Dr. Leon Edelstein*,
Melanin can absorb tremendous quantities of energy of
all kinds, including energy from sunlight, x-ray machines, and
energy that is formed within cells during the metabolism of cells.
He theorizes that Melanin has the ability to neutralize
the potentially harmful effects of these energies.
- In Dr. Frank Barr's theory, matter is
shaped and structured by light: that is, matter is organized
through the interaction of molecules composed of slowed-down
light. These molecular [Melanin] combinations "eat"
light in order to maintain, expand and evolve matter. The more
highly evolved a species, the more complex its biological capacity
to use light.
- Melanin
has superconducting properties; it shows evidence of being a
room-temperature (biological) super-conductor. Normally, superconductivity
occurs only at very low temperatures.
- Melanin
is like a battery. Melanin "may be viewed as a battery
that is partially charged and can always accept an electrical
charge!" 1 When sunlight or other energy comes in
contact with the Melanin battery, it increases the charge of
the battery to a certain degree. When the energy is captured,
the battery has more energy to use in the body. "This means
that the BLACK HUMAN can charge up his MELANIN
just by being in the sun or around the right type of musical
sounds or other energy sources." 2
- Melanin in the eye receives light and
converts it into the electrical energy that comes across as an
image.
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*
Director of the Dept. of Dermatology and Dermato-Pathology at
the
St. Vincent Hospital in Worchester, Mass. 1) Barnes, 14.
2) Ibid., 15..
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