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Wick effect: Revision history


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  • curprev 16:1216:12, 19 November 2022 JVerity talk contribs m 10,066 bytes −140 I am removing " It is one commonly offered explanation for the alleged phenomenon of spontaneous human combustion.[citation needed]" from the introduction paragraph. It's been there from the beginning but has never been cited and isn't even logically possible. The wick effect requires melted fat. For your fat to be melting you have to be on fire. So for the wick effect to occur, combustion has already started, so it can't be an explanation for that combustion. It's almost like a time paradox, l undo Tag: Visual edit

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  • curprev 02:3702:37, 20 June 2022 24.60.164.150 talk 7,577 bytes −167 1991 Oregon murder: Removed fact re: Oregon murder victim, stating autopsy described woman as "well-nourished" and accompanying "dubious" tag and comments. "Well-nourished" is a very common medical descriptor indicating the absence of obvious malnourishment and adds nothing of importance to the passage while erroneously implying the term is an expression for obesity. undo Tags: Mobile edit Mobile web edit

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