Anonymous ID: b2a1f9 April 7, 2020, 3:22 p.m. No.8716221   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6312

>>8716115

Did anyone notice we never found out what sicked and killed those tourists last Jun in the Domincan Republic?

 

Something from the minibar, maybe, allegedly?

 

Contaminated bottled water maybe?

Watch the water

 

The Vatukoula Gold mine is 10 miles away from the source for Fiji Water, which is "well water" drawn from the acquifer.

 

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fiji_Water

 

This is a hardrock gold mine of unknown depth and breadth. Hard rock gold mining uses toxic chemicals to leach the gold out of the crumbled rock. The tailings are rich in arsenic.

 

Chinese Mustard is used as a detoxification crop that grown on the arsenic laden soils and pulls it up into the stems and leaves.

 

https://www.businessinsider.com/internet-freaks-out-trump-sipping-fiji-water-2017-11

Anonymous ID: b2a1f9 April 7, 2020, 3:29 p.m. No.8716312   🗄️.is 🔗kun   >>6663

>>8716221

Sauce for Mustard plant soil detox in Fiji

 

The mustard flower is a beautiful yellow

 

RESEARCH ARTICLE

Previous Next Contents Vol 46(7)

Potential for the phytoremediation of arsenic-contaminated mine tailings in Fiji

 

The objectives of this study were (1) to compare the bioavailability of arsenic (As) to plants in an As-spiked agricultural soil and a naturally contaminated mine tailings, (2) to compare the theoretical ability of various chemical amendments to solubilise As in naturally contaminated mine tailings, and (3) to examine the ability of Brassica juncea (Indian mustard, Chinese Black Mustard) plants to remove the solubilised As from the soil and tailings.

 

The growth media used for this study included mine tailings from a gold mine in Fiji contaminated with As (683 As mg/kg) due to the presence of arsenopyrite in the mined rock, and a pasture soil from New Zealand (Manawatu sandy loam) amended with lime and/or As. Brassica juncea was grown in these substrates in a glasshouse. In a separate batch experiment, we examined the theoretical ability of several chemical extractants to solubilise As from the mine tailings. Of the tested extractants, only hydrochloric acid (HCl) and a mixture containing ammonium oxalate (NH4)2C2O4, oxalic acid, and ascorbic acid were effective in extracting As from the tailings. In the plant growth experiment, solutions of these 2 chemicals were used as soil amendments at 2 different concentrations to increase As uptake by 6-week-old, actively growing B. juncea plants.

 

Arsenic bioavailability as a function of the growth media influenced the germination rate of B. juncea, the As concentration in the plants, and the water-soluble As concentration in the media. There was approximately a 3-fold reduction in the germination of seeds, and a 64- and 380-fold increase in As concentration in plant and soil solution, respectively, in the spiked Manawatu soil compared with the naturally contaminated Fiji mine tailings. The spiking of soil with As did not mimic naturally contaminated tailings in this experiment. The total amount of As taken up by B. juncea plants increased approximately 9 fold with the addition of the amendments. However, the phytoremediation capacity of B. juncea for As extraction in Fiji mine tailings was too low for efficient remediation even in the presence of solubilising chemicals.

 

https://www.publish.csiro.au/sr/sr07200

 

The government of Fiji was overthrown by the military in 2006. It has since been run by a military mafia. The Gold Mine is currently owned by the Chinese and operated by the Fijians.

 

Fiji is not a signatory to the Public Non-corruption treaty, but they do trade heavily with Aus, US, and other signatories.