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7 heifers 1 bull all dead
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<blockquote data-quote="dun" data-source="post: 415599" data-attributes="member: 34"><p>Here's my historical dealings with arsenic in cattle. We used to live just south of a dry lake bed that dumped arsenic laden dust on us any time there was a north wind. We would have a problem with bloat in some of the cattle and would have to tube them. Those same animals would bloat everytime we had a north wind. When butchered they had lesions on their livers and they're joints has calcification. Some animals never bloated and when butchered had normal livers and joints. UC Davis came up with the same baisc idea that I had. "Some animals aren;t bothered much if any by inhaling arsenic dust, toher animlas are." Their solution was to not expose the animals to the dust. Morons acted like we did it by choice.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="dun, post: 415599, member: 34"] Here's my historical dealings with arsenic in cattle. We used to live just south of a dry lake bed that dumped arsenic laden dust on us any time there was a north wind. We would have a problem with bloat in some of the cattle and would have to tube them. Those same animals would bloat everytime we had a north wind. When butchered they had lesions on their livers and they're joints has calcification. Some animals never bloated and when butchered had normal livers and joints. UC Davis came up with the same baisc idea that I had. "Some animals aren;t bothered much if any by inhaling arsenic dust, toher animlas are." Their solution was to not expose the animals to the dust. Morons acted like we did it by choice. [/QUOTE]
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