AtElement Outdoors we strive to be the leader in the most comfortable and affordable, outdoor technical hunting apparel! As most of us that enjoy the outdoors EO was formed and is still operated by blue collar individuals with the passion to create and offer some of the best products at the best possible price so you can enjoy them for years to come.
At Hunters Element we engineer technical high-performance hunting clothing and test in New Zealand's rugged forests and unforgiving mountains. We have a passion for the wild and do what we can to minimise our impact on the environment and to hand the hunting tradition down to our future generations.
In 2017, we found out about the horrors that were involved in the feather down industry to make the worlds puffer jackets. We wanted no part in animal torture until we found a responsible we could trust.
As a pro rugby player and life long hunter, Ben May knows a week hunting is comparable to the rigors of being an athlete. So we've teamed up to develop a compression base layer range for the hunting athlete.
Element Hunters (エレメントハンター, Eremento Hantā, Korean: 엘리먼트 헌터; RR: Elimeonteu Heonteo) is a 2009 Japanese-Korean anime series that began airing in Japan and South Korea as a science-fiction adventure to generate more awareness in chemistry and other sciences. The series is set in the year 2029.[1] A manga series began at the same time, and has continued even after the anime ended in 2010, and the manga still continues until August 2010. Bandai Namco has released a Nintendo DS game for Element Hunters, it was released on October 22, 2009 in Japan and on December 18, 2009 in South Korea.[2][3] This is the last game to be developed by the now defunct Climax Entertainment. The franchise is closing on officials websites in this time.[citation needed]
In 2029, chemical elements such as oxygen, carbon, gold, molybdenum, and cobalt were continually disappearing from Earth. These disappearing elements ultimately disrupted the environment and led to the destruction of various homes, cities, and even entire countries. Researchers discovered that the vanishing elements drained into a planet called Nega Earth, located in another dimension. In 2089, Element dematerialization was occurring rapidly; thus, to save Earth, three special pre-teens picked by the space colony government formed the Element Hunters. Their job was to transport themselves to Nega-Earth to battle monsters called QEXes and retrieve lost elements. However, out of their own concerns, Ren, Chiara, and Homi, three average middle school students from Earth, banded together to also become Element Hunters. With the help of Professor Aimee Carr and Juno, they are able to help save their own planet.
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The superheavy elements are too unstable to be found in nature and are made, one atom at a time, through nuclear fusion. This is achieved by accelerating ions of one element at a target made of a heavier element, hoping the two nuclei combine. For the past 25 years, this has mainly been done (except for nihonium, discovered in Japan) in accelerators at the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research (JINR) in Dubna, Russia, in collaboration with US teams at Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory and Oak Ridge National Laboratory.
The race for elements 119 and 120 is not limited to the US and Russia. Teams that have previously discovered elements at GSI Helmholtz Centre for Heavy Ion Research in Darmstadt, Germany and Riken in Japan are also attempting to synthesise new elements. However, the Japanese team are currently focusing their efforts on discovering element 119 by firing vanadium into curium, while the Germans cannot commit enough resources until they finish the construction of the Fair synchrotron, due for commissioning in 2025.
Update: The headline was changed on 11 October 2023 to make clear that it is the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory that will be conducting the search for new elements, not the University of California, Berkeley
The test I've written was to confirm the belief that using precompiled XPATH in JDOM was faster than iterating through child elements. Instead, what I've found is that XPATH is between 4 and 5 times slower than iterating through lists of children, performing string comparisons, and hunting for what I want.
The XPath is, for me, easier to write, however the getChild route seems more flexible but a little verbose. Still that's a trade I don't mind making for speed. It is also true that even 100 iterations is incredibly fast, so this may be academic...
Hunters Element was born and bred in harsh mountains. As Aussie and Kiwi hunters, we demand more from our gear than any other place on earth, so it's here that we develop and stress test our gear to breaking point. We prize these pristine environments and want to see them kept this way for generations to come. That's why Hunters Element is so obsessed with sustainability. From making over 90% of our technical hunting gear out of recycled plastics, packaging all our products in paper and cardboard, and ditching dodgy chemicals, we're dead set on keeping the hills clean for the next lot.
As my first post I'd love to introduce myself as an Imperan boss hunter that started this journey a few weeks back. As u can see in tittle, my character name is Bismuth Element and I'm an Elite Knight. I'm from Chile and I started playing in 2003 as a kid, stopped in 2011 with a rather unexpected english degree, went to college, graduated and rejoined our lovely game last year in May. What a great way to spend the time during lockdowns.
For over 8 years I was playing on Eternia, merged into Vunira at some point. And as I recently returned to the game, I founded the guild Periodic Table, met new friends and allies were we thrive in a neutral community of friends and allies.
In day 2 of bosshunting (June 12th), I found one of the elusive foes during the morning check and another one in the lunch check! I really find this motivating to continue to seek rare encounters and items!
The Element 4.0 Magnesium is an ultra-lightweight modular hunting rifle chassis designed for the backcountry hunter. The standalone chassis, without buttstock or grip, can weigh only 16 oz depending on the action inlet. When configured with a carbon fiber buttstock and carbon fiber grip the system weight is just 28 oz. This ultralight configuration is the first rifle chassis system in the world to weigh under 2 lbs! Now featured with a built-in bubble level, and machined in RRS 1.5" dovetail (Arca-Swiss) in the forend.
Machined from AZ61A Magnesium, the Element 4.0 Mg retains all the strength and durability for which our rifle chassis systems are known, but at a fraction of the weight! This is the ultimate lightweight, modular chassis platform for the backcountry outdoorsman!
The Smoke Carbon Fiber Buttstock offers a robust and lightweight rifle buttstock option for situations when every ounce of weight matters. It features an adjustable cheek rest, limb-saver reoil pad, and M-LOK slots. Our Smoke Carbon Buttstock Bag Rider attaches via the M-LOK slot along with either our Quick-Detach Sling Adapter or Bipod / Sling Adapter. View Specs
The Smoke Carbon Fiber Buttstock Bag Rider was designed based on customer feedback to complement and increase the functionality of the Smoke Carbon Fiber Buttstock. It increases the shooter's ability to better spot their shots for quicker follow-ups. View Specs
Hagan made his approach first, and with extraordinary skill he glided his plane onto the runway in a dead-stick landing, bursting a tire on impact. Robinson was less fortunate. His engine flamed out 3 miles short of safety, leaving him no option but to try to land on the ocean surface and hope a rescue helicopter could get to him in time. His plane hit the water, bounced, and flipped. The chopper arrived just as the plane slipped beneath the surface; all that remained was an oil slick, a glove, and some maps.
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