• comments list

    [Diplomi_yuen  2024-08-07 03:52Здравствуйте! Приобрести документ института вы можете у нас. rushkas-diplomxx.ru
    [Diplomi_ngen  2024-08-07 03:52Привет, друзья! Заказать документ о получении высшего образования вы можете в нашей компании в столице. [url=http://rushkas-diplomas.ru/]rushkas-diplomas.ru[/url]
    [JamesLuh  2024-08-07 03:14Heat is testing the limits of human survivability. Here’s how it kills кракен даркнет Philip Kreycik should have survived his run. In the summer of 2021, the 37-year-old ultra-marathon runner used an app to plot a roughly 8-mile loop through Pleasanton Ridge Regional Park in California, a huge stretch of parkland threaded with trails. On the morning of July 10, as temperatures crept into the 90s, Kreycik set off from his car, leaving his phone and water locked inside. He started at a lightning pace — eating up the first 5 miles, each one in less than six minutes. https://kraken19v.com kraken войти Then things started to go wrong. GPS data from his smartwatch showed he slowed dramatically. He veered off the trail. His steps became erratic. By this time, the temperature was above 100 degrees Fahrenheit. When Kreycik failed to show up for a family lunch, his wife contacted the police. It took more than three weeks to find his body. An autopsy showed no sign of traumatic injuries. Police confirmed Kreycik likely experienced a medical emergency related to the heat. The tragedy is sadly far from unique; extreme heat is turning ordinary activities deadly. People have died taking a stroll in the midday sun, on a family hike in a national park, at an outdoor Taylor Swift concert, and even sweltering in their homes without air conditioning. During this year’s Hajj pilgrimage in June, around 1,300 people perished as temperatures pushed above 120 degrees Fahrenheit in Mecca.
    [JamesSnilm  2024-08-07 03:13Рейтинг онлайн казино: ТОП платформ для безопасной игры рейтинг онлайн казино

    I want to comment

    content*
    Your name
    Verify code*