Anonymous ID: f1bd61 March 4, 2020, 6:52 p.m. No.8321083   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1167

Taking to Facebook, the mum shared what she'd discovered in hope other mums could relate to the shock horror she'd experienced when first learning of the "child-friendly Kama Sutra guide".

 

And since discovering it's contents online, other people were left in disbelief that such a book even exists - especially for children.

 

The children's book titled " Mummy Laid an Egg!" started off like any other fluffy tale of this nature, explaining that girls were made with "sugar and spice and all things nice".

 

Explaining it was, at this point, "innocent enough", the mum-of-three continued to flick through the book when things took an unexpected turn.

 

more:

https://www.thesun.co.uk/fabulous/11088962/children-book-sex-positions/

Anonymous ID: f1bd61 March 4, 2020, 6:59 p.m. No.8321167   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>8321083

more sauce…looks like copy pasta from 2017

 

Child-Friendly Kama Sutra Guide In Kids' Book

 

Mar 16, 2017 - To say that Peck was taken aback by the book's content would be an understatement. Describing it as an "innocent enough looking book," she recounts her surprise when what began as a "sugar and spice and all things nice" kids' story became "a child-friendly Kama Sutra guide" around page 10.

 

https://www.redbookmag.com/life/mom-kids/news/a49287/child-friendly-kama-sutra-guide-kids-book-viral/

Anonymous ID: f1bd61 March 4, 2020, 7:14 p.m. No.8321335   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>1378

If their results can be replicated, it will be the first protein ever identified that didn't originate here on Earth.

 

"This paper characterises the first protein to be discovered in a meteorite," the researchers wrote in a paper uploaded to preprint server arXiv. Their work is yet to be peer reviewed, but the implications of this finding are noteworthy.

 

Over the last few years, meteorites from the wider Solar System have been yielding some building blocks for life as we know it. Cyanide, which could play a role in building molecules necessary for life; ribose, a type of sugar that is found in RNA; and amino acids, organic compounds that combine to form proteins.

 

Researchers have now revisited the meteorites that yielded the latter. Led by physicist Malcolm McGeoch of superconductor X-ray source supplier PLEX Corporation, the team focussed their search for something more.

 

Using "state-of-the-art" mass spectrometry, they found what they believe to be protein in a meteorite called Acfer 086, found in Algeria in 1990.

 

While not proof of extraterrestrial living creatures, this protein discovery makes for yet another of life's building blocks to be found in a space rock. There are many processes that can produce protein, but life, as far as we know, can't exist without it.

 

https://www.sciencealert.com/scientists-claim-to-have-found-the-first-known-extraterrestrial-protein-in-a-meteorite