It looks like you're using an Ad Blocker.
Please white-list or disable AboveTopSecret.com in your ad-blocking tool.
Thank you.
Some features of ATS will be disabled while you continue to use an ad-blocker.
originally posted by: FredT
originally posted by: TritonTaranis
Could this be a mass grave? Or foundations for what?
New construction of something
twitter.com...
Ive seen this before on that 'Gold Rush" show. It looks like a lining used to build a temporary reservoir. You use people to avoid puncturing the lining.
It seems less likely that that much care would go into a mass grave
originally posted by: scubagravy
a reply to: jedi_hamster
Surely they’re not that silly? Yeah?
originally posted by: Ch1m3ra
a reply to: Advantage
If we speculate down the mass graves route - considering the recent CCP directive that all infeced bodies must be incinerated straight away, I wonder what changed.
Too many bodies?
originally posted by: Advantage
It was already said to be running 24/7 at capacity...
You Hu said that his funeral parlour had 18 cremators, but only 11 cremators were able to operate, and one furnace required 50 minutes to burn one body.
originally posted by: hiddenNZ
a reply to: jedi_hamster
Aannnnnd,it's gone,that was fast.
originally posted by: EnhancedInterrogator
originally posted by: Advantage
It was already said to be running 24/7 at capacity...
Does anybody have any links that can say what crematorium's are in/around Wuhan? or, what their total combined "capacity" would be? It does not seem like something easy to validate.
From this we can see that the Hankou Funeral Parlour currently can burn up to 576 corpses per day, but due to transportation constraints, it currently burns about 225 corpses of new crown patients each day.
Among the ongoing mysteries surrounding last week’s arrest of Harvard University nanoscientist Charles Lieber is the precise nature of the research program Lieber was conducting in his cooperation with Chinese researchers.
He was released two days later on a $1 million bond. An affidavit outlining the charges against Lieber notes that in January 2013, he signed an agreement between Harvard and Wuhan University of Technology (WUT) in China.
In Lieber’s case, however, the battery angle poses a puzzle. That’s because a search of the titles of Lieber’s more than 400 papers and more than 75 U.S. and Chinese patents reveals no mentions of “battery,” “batteries,” “vehicle,” or “vehicles.” (According to Lieber’s CV, through 2019 he has co-authored 412 research papers and has 65 awarded and pending U.S. patents. The website of the Chinese National Intellectual Property Administration indicates that Lieber has been awarded 11 Chinese patents.)
In fact, one U.S. nanoscientist and former student of Lieber’s says: “I have never seen Charlie working on batteries or nanowire batteries.”
The Brain Research through Advancing Innovative Neurotechnologies (BRAIN) Initiative is aimed at revolutionizing our understanding of the human brain. By accelerating the development and application of innovative technologies, researchers will be able to produce a revolutionary new dynamic picture of the brain that, for the first time, shows how individual cells and complex neural circuits interact in both time and space. Long desired by researchers seeking new ways to treat, cure, and even prevent brain disorders, this picture will fill major gaps in our current knowledge and provide unprecedented opportunities for exploring exactly how the brain enables the human body to record, process, utilize, store, and retrieve vast quantities of information, all at the speed of thought.
originally posted by: SpartanStoic
a reply to: Advantage
Buddhism isn’t that strong in China.