A new study from the Norwegian University of Science and
Technology shows that increased UV radiation can have an effect on human
fertility over generations.
Technology shows that increased UV radiation can have an effect on human
fertility over generations.
Gine Roll Skjærvø at the Norwegian University of Science and
Technology's (NTNU) Department of Biology has studied church records from
1750-1900 and looked at life history variables: how old were women when they
had their first child, and their last? How many years passed between the birth
of each child, and how many of these children survived? How many of these
children were in turn married and had children?All told, she studied
information from more than 9,000 people listed in the church records she examined.Part
of this information was compared with environmental factors, including solar
activity. Specifically man made clikmate change and its effect on the ozone
layer which protects the earth from high UVb/UVc radiation.Skjærvø and her
colleagues found that Norwegian children born in years with lots of solar
activity had a higher probability of dying compared to children who were born
in years with less solar activity.
Technology's (NTNU) Department of Biology has studied church records from
1750-1900 and looked at life history variables: how old were women when they
had their first child, and their last? How many years passed between the birth
of each child, and how many of these children survived? How many of these
children were in turn married and had children?All told, she studied
information from more than 9,000 people listed in the church records she examined.Part
of this information was compared with environmental factors, including solar
activity. Specifically man made clikmate change and its effect on the ozone
layer which protects the earth from high UVb/UVc radiation.Skjærvø and her
colleagues found that Norwegian children born in years with lots of solar
activity had a higher probability of dying compared to children who were born
in years with less solar activity.
An 11-year cycle…On average, the lifespan of Norwegian
children born in years that had a great deal of solar activity was 5.2 years
shorter than other children. The largest difference was in the probability of
dying during the first two years of life.Children who were born in years with
lots of sunshine and who survived were also more likely to have fewer children,
who in turn gave birth to fewer children than others. This finding shows that
increased UV radiation during years of high solar activity had an effect across
generations. UPDATE: WHITE INFERTILITY CAUSE DISCOVERED! Since the 1970's UV
radiation levels have been rising globally this is the central reason we are
seeing non melanated populations below replacement level births as UVB and UVC
radiation sterilizes males without the protection of MELANIN!
children born in years that had a great deal of solar activity was 5.2 years
shorter than other children. The largest difference was in the probability of
dying during the first two years of life.Children who were born in years with
lots of sunshine and who survived were also more likely to have fewer children,
who in turn gave birth to fewer children than others. This finding shows that
increased UV radiation during years of high solar activity had an effect across
generations. UPDATE: WHITE INFERTILITY CAUSE DISCOVERED! Since the 1970's UV
radiation levels have been rising globally this is the central reason we are
seeing non melanated populations below replacement level births as UVB and UVC
radiation sterilizes males without the protection of MELANIN!
Pesticides, hormone-disrupting chemicals, diet, stress,
smoking and obesity have all been suggested as possible reasons behind the
dramatic declines but it is essentially the adherence to fossil fuels that has
caused this and they don't want the world to know. The research has proven this
but NO major news outlet will tell the truth! Sperm counts have plunged by
nearly 60 per cent in just 40 years among white men and light skinned
pheomelanin dominant Asians.The same trend was not seen in other parts of the
world such as South America, Africa and Southeast Asia. Japan,Korea and China
though have some of the lowest birth rates in the world so low China has lifted
its ban on one child families but the numbers have not grown!Writing in the
journal Human Reproduction Update, the researchers – from Israel, the US,
Denmark, Brazil and Spain – said total sperm count had fallen by 59.3 per cent
between 1971 and 2011 in Europe, North America, Australia and New Zealand.
Sperm concentration fell by 52.4 per cent.“The public health implications are
even wider. Recent studies have shown that poor sperm count is associated with
overall morbidity and mortality,” they added...meaning for the first time in a
century white men Aand women are seeing their life expectancy lower globally
.One of the team, Professor Shanna Swan, of the Icahn School of Medicine at
Mount Sinai, New York, said falling sperm counts had been “of great concern”
since they were first noticed about 25 years ago.She added: “This definitive
study shows, for the first time, that this decline is strong and continuing.
Professor Sharpe said that across Northern Europe today 20 per cent of young
men had a sperm count low enough to “impair their fertility”.“And, as the
present study indicates, this is likely to get worse rather than better as we
move forwards in time,” he warned.In 2004 A team of researchers in the U.S. and
Germany measured the highest levels of ultraviolet radiation ever recorded on
the Earth’s surface.These record-setting levels were not measured in
Antarctica, where ozone holes have been a recurring problem for decades,” says
team leader Nathalie A. Cabrol of the SETI Institute and NASA Ames Research
Center. “This is in the tropics, in an area where there are small towns and
villages.” Now 13 years later the problem has spread worldwide because no one
took it seriously! According to a World health organization report given to the
United Nations A marked increase in the incidence of skin cancers and lowered
sperm vitality and motility has been
observed in fair-skinned populations worldwide since the early 1970s. This is
strongly associated with personal habits in relation to sun exposure and its
ultraviolet (UV) component..Prolonged human exposure to solar UV radiation may result
in acute and chronic health effects on the skin, eye and immune system. Sunburn
and tanning are the best known acute effects of excessive UV radiation
exposure; in the long term, UV radiation-induced degenerative changes in
cells.Increased UV radiation can have an effect on human fertility over
generations, a new study has warned. Exposure to enhanced levels of ambient
ultraviolet (UV) radiation (UVR) can have adverse effects including damage at
the cellular and molecular level and impairment of development, fecundity and
survival. The following is what is happening to Europeans globally "
Irradiation to the central nervous system may affect the timing of the onset of
puberty, result in hyperprolactinemia, or cause gonadotropin deficiency if the
hypothalamic-pituitary axis is involved in the radiation field. Direct
irradiation to the testis will, in lower doses, affect the germinal epithelium:
doses of irradiation greater than 0.35 Gy cause aspermia, which may be
reversible. The time taken for recovery increases with larger doses; however,
with doses in excess of 2 Gy aspermia may be permanent. At higher radiation
doses (> 15 Gy), Leydig cell function will also be affected. In addition to
radiation dose, the vulnerability of the testis is dependent on the age at
irradiation and the pubertal status of the male. In the female, the response of
the ovary to the effects of irradiation varies with age as well as dose, and
separation of ovarian dysfunction into hormonal and fertility effects is not
clearcut. An ovarian dose of 4 Gy may cause a 30% incidence of sterility in
young women, but 100% sterility in women over 40 years of age. Pelvic
irradiation may also have a profound effect on the uterus, with arrested growth
in the prepubertal girl, and failure of uterine expansion during pregnancy with
subsequent miscarriages and premature labor."
smoking and obesity have all been suggested as possible reasons behind the
dramatic declines but it is essentially the adherence to fossil fuels that has
caused this and they don't want the world to know. The research has proven this
but NO major news outlet will tell the truth! Sperm counts have plunged by
nearly 60 per cent in just 40 years among white men and light skinned
pheomelanin dominant Asians.The same trend was not seen in other parts of the
world such as South America, Africa and Southeast Asia. Japan,Korea and China
though have some of the lowest birth rates in the world so low China has lifted
its ban on one child families but the numbers have not grown!Writing in the
journal Human Reproduction Update, the researchers – from Israel, the US,
Denmark, Brazil and Spain – said total sperm count had fallen by 59.3 per cent
between 1971 and 2011 in Europe, North America, Australia and New Zealand.
Sperm concentration fell by 52.4 per cent.“The public health implications are
even wider. Recent studies have shown that poor sperm count is associated with
overall morbidity and mortality,” they added...meaning for the first time in a
century white men Aand women are seeing their life expectancy lower globally
.One of the team, Professor Shanna Swan, of the Icahn School of Medicine at
Mount Sinai, New York, said falling sperm counts had been “of great concern”
since they were first noticed about 25 years ago.She added: “This definitive
study shows, for the first time, that this decline is strong and continuing.
Professor Sharpe said that across Northern Europe today 20 per cent of young
men had a sperm count low enough to “impair their fertility”.“And, as the
present study indicates, this is likely to get worse rather than better as we
move forwards in time,” he warned.In 2004 A team of researchers in the U.S. and
Germany measured the highest levels of ultraviolet radiation ever recorded on
the Earth’s surface.These record-setting levels were not measured in
Antarctica, where ozone holes have been a recurring problem for decades,” says
team leader Nathalie A. Cabrol of the SETI Institute and NASA Ames Research
Center. “This is in the tropics, in an area where there are small towns and
villages.” Now 13 years later the problem has spread worldwide because no one
took it seriously! According to a World health organization report given to the
United Nations A marked increase in the incidence of skin cancers and lowered
sperm vitality and motility has been
observed in fair-skinned populations worldwide since the early 1970s. This is
strongly associated with personal habits in relation to sun exposure and its
ultraviolet (UV) component..Prolonged human exposure to solar UV radiation may result
in acute and chronic health effects on the skin, eye and immune system. Sunburn
and tanning are the best known acute effects of excessive UV radiation
exposure; in the long term, UV radiation-induced degenerative changes in
cells.Increased UV radiation can have an effect on human fertility over
generations, a new study has warned. Exposure to enhanced levels of ambient
ultraviolet (UV) radiation (UVR) can have adverse effects including damage at
the cellular and molecular level and impairment of development, fecundity and
survival. The following is what is happening to Europeans globally "
Irradiation to the central nervous system may affect the timing of the onset of
puberty, result in hyperprolactinemia, or cause gonadotropin deficiency if the
hypothalamic-pituitary axis is involved in the radiation field. Direct
irradiation to the testis will, in lower doses, affect the germinal epithelium:
doses of irradiation greater than 0.35 Gy cause aspermia, which may be
reversible. The time taken for recovery increases with larger doses; however,
with doses in excess of 2 Gy aspermia may be permanent. At higher radiation
doses (> 15 Gy), Leydig cell function will also be affected. In addition to
radiation dose, the vulnerability of the testis is dependent on the age at
irradiation and the pubertal status of the male. In the female, the response of
the ovary to the effects of irradiation varies with age as well as dose, and
separation of ovarian dysfunction into hormonal and fertility effects is not
clearcut. An ovarian dose of 4 Gy may cause a 30% incidence of sterility in
young women, but 100% sterility in women over 40 years of age. Pelvic
irradiation may also have a profound effect on the uterus, with arrested growth
in the prepubertal girl, and failure of uterine expansion during pregnancy with
subsequent miscarriages and premature labor."
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