lunes, 2 de noviembre de 2009

How was the moon created.

Once upon a time, where there was guy going home taking food and other stuff in his carriage, everything was normal, birds singing and the sun shining, but something changed and that beautiful sun waked up and started to burn everything, it damaged the carriage and made the guy hit his head and faint in there, and so everything was in fire, it was a forestal fire, everything was being burn and the dog partnering the man started to bark and the sound made a sea dragon to wake up. The sea dragon was furious with was the sun was doing to the environment, so the sun and the sea dragon began a fight, but the dragon won by cooling the sun and bit a half of it so it turned the moon. Then the guy waked up and thanked the sea dragon for his help and everything else was fine from now on.

Health Risks of Smoking


Smoking is one of the main causes of serious health diseases, such as cancer, stroke and heart problems. If you have no plans of quitting today, having knowledge of the different types of illnesses that you may experience through years of smoking may change your perception and lead you to stop smoking.

In this section, you will discover how smoking affects various parts of the body including the eyes, nose, throat, lungs, heart, skin, blood, etc. Here are some possible health effects of smoking:

• Lung Cancer
• Heart Diseases
• High Blood Pressure
• Bad Breath
• Gum Disease
• Depression
• Snoring
• Diabetes
• Infertility on men and women
• Thyroid Disease
• Harmful effects on Bones and Joints

Ten Personal Solutions to Global Warming



Individual choices can have an impact on global climate change. Reducing your family's heat-trapping emissions does not mean forgoing modern conveniences; it means making smart choices and using energy-efficient products, which may require an additional investment up front, but often pay you back in energy savings within a couple of years.

Since Americans' per capita emissions of heat-trapping gases is 5.6 tons—more than double the amount of western Europeans—we can all make choices that will greatly reduce our families' global warming impact.