Yes, after my doctorate and post-doctorate, I went on to get a separate graduate degree in science education.
So when you post something "as an authority" you are using yourself as that "authority", correct?
Yes, after my doctorate and post-doctorate, I went on to get a separate graduate degree in science education.
You forgot about the microscopic images of iron fragments and the technique that other researchers are using to obtain these fragments. They isolate them with a magnet. This isn't my work. I haven't "isolated" any iron fragments from my samples. My microscope images are non-isolated samples.
I guess what I could do is develop some kind of calibrated magnetic purification scheme and show two samples, one of which has been separated with a magnet, but that's kind of messy. I might do it.
So when you post something "as an authority" you are using yourself as that "authority", correct?
Yes, after my doctorate and post-doctorate, I went on to get a separate graduate degree in science education.
What you are experiencing is a person in control. You all might want the world from me, but I'm only giving you what I want to give you. I'm testing ideas. "How do you detect DNA cheaply outside of a formal laboratory setting?" is not controversial or interesting science.
hypocritical and fraud
Anything else you feel we should be aware of? As you are asserting that your educational background makes you an authority, I think it make sense to see whether your employment history does so as well.
What you are experiencing is a person in control.
I feel alittle quezy when I think I likely paid for this education with my tax dollars.
Can anyone expand on the bolded statement for me?
There is no "cheap", non-laboratory method for detecting/identifying DNA. Those saying differently are only displaying their ignorance.
Yes, after my doctorate and post-doctorate, I went on to get a separate graduate degree in science education.
You haven't yet given me a motivation to reveal my technical specifications. Me posting to JREF is about me testing out some ideas. It has never been about satisfying people.
If there were a good reason that benefited my purpose, I'd reveal the specs. I have some very good reasons not to, not limited to the fact that I have decided to present the evidence in a certain way. If you want me to change my long term strategy, then you'll have to give me a reason that benefits my goals.
Otherwise, it's good enough to know that my PhD was in biomedical science and that I have been fully trained in DNA technology.
There is no "cheap", non-laboratory method for detecting/identifying DNA. Those saying differently are only displaying their ignorance.
I'm guessing her method was "black light" and she knows she'll be laughed out of the place if she admits it.
So you're suggesting that she shined a black light on her dust, and if it glowed, she assumed it contained human DNA, and not rat urine?
So you're suggesting that she shined a black light on her dust, and if it glowed, she assumed it contained human DNA, and not rat urine?
...I'm not sure if you're saying it's difficult/expensive or that it can not be done.
No, I'm not saying it is impossible, but consider this...
Which would be the easiest?...bringing some very expensive/sensitive equipment to each and ever crime scene to collect DNA, or taking the DNA sample to the equipment to be evaluated?
The answer is obvious...
Why isn't the perimeter steel as dark as the core steel then?
The core had more than just steel. Gypsum enclosed the stairwells, elevator shafts and bathrooms. There were fixtures and tiles in the bathrooms, particularly ceramics.