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| Tiwanaku ruins Bolivia. 13,000 foot altitude |

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| In background is unexcavated pyramid. I took photo. |
| myself on horse in the high Lacondan December 2003 |

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| state of Chiapas Mexico |
This scenario has crossed my mind as the Avian Flu H1N1 (lp)
seems localized at a time of year on the edge of the season when it should not be localized but wide spread if it is
a generalized non local flu spread by migrating ducks and geese. In my subpage directly above I have offered the greater possibility.
But at the same time I know Mexico City park lakes fill in with sediment and too much sediment fill in means the park
lakes must be dredged from time to time. In lake silt in Mexico City the only bird flu recombinants of virus will
not be that old. The very old bird flu recombinants will die in that Mexico City lake temperature environment in contrast
to Spitsbergen or far northeast Greenland, both of from where on a mountain the arctic ice cap can be viewed. As
a result because the bird flu recombinats geese and ducks will pick up in Mexico City lake silt are not old
recombinants people will still have immunity and the H1N1-A (lp) virus ducks and geese spread when they sneeze at the
parks on the blankets being fed molassis popcorn with be a mild flu. GIven this is all a reality the rest of North
America can breath easily as a flu - most of it - spread this route by the permanent remainder for the rest of the
year ducks and geese of the Mexico City parks - will confine itself to Mexico City. However we are on the edge of
the seasonal year when ducks and geese migrate north or stay where they are (in this case the Mexico City parks). But
some of these ducks and geese will not stay in place but will continue on north. But increased infections will be
very low to the north as most of the ducks and geese in Mexico City there this time of year will remain in Mexico City. To
reiterate it is difficult to judge if this scenario could be the case. We hear nothing about Mexico City this spring
dredging the setiment out of its park lakes. And nature is not always exact in its predictions. Returning from Spanish School
Cabaguil in Guatemala in June 2008 I was mowing my mothers lawn she age 96 riding the mower and there was long grass
and many flowers and a half dozen big fat rabbits on the lawn the fattest I have ever seen and they were all over the area
on peoples lawns. When I spotted out in the open on the edge of the woods on my mothers three acre lawn an Ontario Canada
wolf who had moved south to participate in the harvest. He was not particularly frightened of me moving towards
him on the mower but retreated into the woods. And within the next two weeks the big fat rabbits had disappeared
to be replaced by a few small scrawny rabbits. There are a lot of coyotes half the size of the beautiful and magnificant Ontario
wolf in New York State. The Ontario wolf is not rare but not common in northern New York State. A few years out of 10
years he is here and then disappears. Basically his roving is on food population dynamics. There are no differences in the
Mexico City area on the roving of the black Mexican wolf and he is sometimes to be seen in the greater Mexico City
area and the roving of the Canada Ontario wolf in northern New York State. These same erratic dynamics of nature principles
apply to geese and ducks. This year the beginning of May 2009 is the near the beginning of the season for the Ontario wolf
in northern New York State and it is the edge of the end of the northern migrational season for ducks and geese in Mexico
City area. Generally, unless there are unusual nature dynamics, ducks and geese in Mexico City are there for the long
stay if still there at this time of Spring. It makes it almost impossible to judge.
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