Not exact matches
This
suggests that
none of the present - day populations in our
data set, including the population from Cornwall, are as closely related to the Iron Age samples as Denmark and the Netherlands are to the Anglo - Saxon samples.
Yet
none of these subjects had hypercalcemia.105 Taken together, these
data suggest on the one hand that blood levels
of calcium can become elevated without leading to toxicity, and on the other, that toxicity can occur even in the absence
of elevated calcium.
But as the
data suggests,
none of these arguments hold water.
None - the-less, our
data suggest that fluency in writing the letters
of the alphabet is a reasonable goal for all normal children by the end
of first - grade.
And then there is the predominant 100KY boreal oscillation, with interglacials rought 10KY long, where we have a lot
of theory
suggesting that it is due to this or to that — orbital variations, tilt, and more — but
none of those theories fits old
data or predicts new
data terribly well or believably.
AFAIK,
none of them are reliable at predicting the strength
of the ocean mixing (the
data I've seen
suggests they are way off).
(Unfortunately,
none of us early critics thought it useful or plausible back then to
suggest that the biggest threat from
data - driven targeting would be a foreign actor like Russia using it to mess with our democratic process.)