viernes, 22 de febrero de 2019

A Dirty Female Secret…

 
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Nobody wants to admit it-but women like MONEY.

Not because they're 'bad'...but, rather, because it's in their DNA.

Women like money, because it buys resources. And, therefore, women like men with Money and Resources.

It's that simple.

It's not 'good,' or 'bad,' it simply is.

Key Point:

All other things being equal, a man with more money has more STATUS. And, as a result, he’ll have more 'dating options.'

Now, let me ask you THIS:

"What would it mean to you to earn an extra $250, $500 or even $1,000 a month?"

How about an extra few hundred dollars a week?

Or, even, in a day?

Imagine THAT....

An extra $250, $500 or $1,000 a day!

That'd make a difference to your life, I'm willing to bet. It'll give you more STATUS and make you more attractive to women, that's for sure.

And, sex aside, it'll also just make your life nicer, and less financially stressful. You'll have the money to do more things, to help more people out, to save and invest more.

Money doesn't automatically make you HAPPY.

But, it does give you OPTIONS! And, options are very nice to have.

There is no downside.

Question is:

HOW do you make that happen?

"How do you earn an extra few hundred dollars a month? Or, even an extra thousand bucks a day?"

THIS Short Video explains it all

I highly recommend you give it a watch, if:

- You want to create a second 'income stream'
- You have ever wondered how to make money online
- You HATE your job (as a recent survey showed a whopping 74% of Americans do!), and want to consider something else, that’s less stressful, more enjoyable and way more profitable

====>> Click here to register for the webinar now (It's FREE)

And, I'll talk to you soon...

Your friend,

Benjamin  Henry

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Critical to the science, trees from the same region tend to develop the same patterns of ring widths for a given period of chronological study.

Researchers can compare and match these patterns ring-for-ring with patterns from trees which have grown at the same time in the same geographical zone (and therefore under similar climatic conditions).

When one can match these tree-ring patterns across successive trees in the same locale, in overlapping fashion, chronologies can be built up—both for entire geographical regions and for sub-regions. Moreover, wood from ancient structures with known chronologies can be matched to the tree-ring data (a technique called cross-dating), and the age of the wood can thereby be determined precisely.

Dendrochronologists originally carried out cross-dating by visual inspection; more recently, they have harnessed computers to do the task, applying statistical techniques to assess the matching. To eliminate individual variations in tree-ring growth, dendrochronologists take the smoothed average of the tree-ring widths of multiple tree-samples to build up a ring history, a process termed replication.

A tree-ring history whose beginning- and end-dates are not known is called a floating chronology. It can be anchored by cross-matching a section against another chronology (tree-ring history) whose dates are known. A fully anchored and cross-matched chronology for oak and pine in central Europe extends back 12,460 years, and an oak chronology goes back 7,429 years in Ireland and 6,939 years in England.

Comparison of radiocarbon and dendrochronological ages supports the consistency of these two independent dendrochronological sequences. Another fully anchored chronology that extends back 8500 years exists for the bristlecone pine in the Southwest US (White Mountains of California



 

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