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d-25785House OversightOther

Scientific essay on iron origins with no actionable investigative content

The passage is a purely educational description of iron formation in stars and a brief author bio. It contains no names, transactions, dates, or allegations linking powerful actors to misconduct, maki Describes stellar nucleosynthesis and supernovae producing iron. Mentions author Curt Stager, an ecologist and climate scientist at Paul Smith’s College. No references to political figures, financial

Date
November 11, 2025
Source
House Oversight
Reference
House Oversight #015481
Pages
1
Persons
0
Integrity
No Hash Available

Summary

The passage is a purely educational description of iron formation in stars and a brief author bio. It contains no names, transactions, dates, or allegations linking powerful actors to misconduct, maki Describes stellar nucleosynthesis and supernovae producing iron. Mentions author Curt Stager, an ecologist and climate scientist at Paul Smith’s College. No references to political figures, financial

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astronomyeducationhouse-oversightscience

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Text extracted via OCR from the original document. May contain errors from the scanning process.
NAUTIL.US TEXT SETS Iron: Your ancient blood When you cut yourself, the wreckage of stars spills out. Every atom of iron in your blood, which helps your heart shuttle oxygen from your lungs to your cells, once helped destroy a massive star. The fierce nuclear fusion reactions that set stars ablaze create the atomic elements of life. As the star ages, it fus- es progressively larger elements, such as silicon, sul- fur, and calcrum. Eventually, iron atoms are fused. The problem is that iron fusion consumes as much energy as it produces, so it weakens the star. If the star is big enough, it will collapse in on itself, its outer layers rebounding against the dense imner core, and a supernova explosion will result. The blast sprays out iron at supersonic speeds, fillmg great swathes of space with debris that can form new solar systems. The iron in your frying pan, house keys, and blood is essentially cosmic shrapnel from the tremendous explosions that ripped through our galaxy billions of years ago. The same blasts also released carbon, nitrogen, oxygen, and other elements of life, which later produced the sun, the Earth, and eventually—you. © curt stager is an ecologist and climate scientist at Paul Smith’s College. He is the author of Deep Future: The Next 100,000 Years of Life On Earth, and also co-hosts a weekly science program on North Country Public Radio. 21

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