Which Kangen Water Machine is Right for You Revisited.

21 08 2008

Lately I have been getting a lot of people inquiring about the difference in the Kangen water machines.

In my opinion, all the Kangen water machines are the best in the industry and the standard by which all other water ionizers compare themselves. Enagic has set the standard with the unbeatable Leveluk SD 501 Kangen water device. However, Enagic does manufacture 5 different Kangen water devices plus the Anespa shower and bath unit which produces mineral ion water for your bath or shower.

The five different Kangen water ionizers  are all excellent and range in price from $1,280 for the Sunus to $6,000 for the Leveluk Super 501. The other models in between are the Leveluk JRII, the Leveluk DXII and Enagic’s flagship product, the water ionizer that all other ionizers compare their product to, the infamous Leveluk SD501 water ionizer by Enagic. To get all the details and learn more about the different water ionizers from Enagic go to Which Kangen water ionizer is right for you

By Juan Garces: Preventive Health Promoter, Levittown Pennsylvania 215-269-8134



“Dead Zones” Multiplying Fast, Coastal Water Study Says

15 08 2008

“Dead zones” are on the rise, says a new study that identified stark growth in the number of coastal areas where the water has too little oxygen to sustain marine life.

There are now more than 400 known dead zones in coastal waters worldwide, compared to 305 in the 1990s, according to study author Robert Diaz of the Virginia Institute of Marine Science.

Those numbers are up from 162 in the 1980s, 87 in the 1970s, and 49 in the 1960s, Diaz said. In the 1910s, four dead zones had been identified.

Diaz and co-author Rutger Rosenberg, of the University of Gothenburg in Sweden, said in a press release that dead zones are now “the key stressor on marine ecosystems” and

Read the rest of this article



A global map of “dead zones”—where coastal waters contain too little oxygen to sustain life—shows (as black dots) a concentration in the Northern Hemisphere, where human activity has had the most effect.

As of August 2008, there were more than 400 known “dead zones,” scientists said, up from just over 300 in the 1990s.

Image courtesy Science/AAAS






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