02-16-2015, 12:42 AM
(02-15-2015, 10:07 AM)Eagle1 Wrote: Okay, I'm convinced that I found your dream details, but not only is the answer out in left field, there is much more research to conduct. JC164 is here:
http://www.straininfo.net/strains/890979
Talk about one heck of a confusing website. I can ascertain that they are either creating or designing new strains of bacteria. JC164 is called Flavobacterium aquaticum
...whatever that means. The name of the website above is a play on words. Histri. "Make Histri: Reconstructing the exchange history of bacterial and archaeal type strains"
Histri looks a lot like Hiat, although they sound completely different. Can't see anything that might bring in car batteries or "Regent." Maybe "Histri Recent" meaning that we need to look at the most recent Histri strains they have made??
If it wasn't for the ice cream cone dream and resulting saga that is STILL ongoing today, I wouldn't be so emphatic about finding the real meaning of this dream. The Histri feels right to me, but the website explaining it is so incredibly scant on what everything means. Sherriann's dreams don't point to superficial headlines. There's something really big here, and we have an opportunity to know it before everyone else on the planet.
From what I can tell from a few other sites that referenced the same scientific paper, this is a new strain of flavobacterium which was discovered and isolated from a flooded rice field in India. Some strains of flavobacterium are known to cause infections in fresh water fish and I think-can't be sure because some of the language is WAY over my head-there's more than one name for the classification.
Histri could be a play on the word history using the prefix "hist" from histology, which is the study of the microscopic anatomy of cells and tissues of plants and animals.
"Regent" also refers to a temporary acting head of a monarchy. http://www.thefreedictionary.com/regent Also used as a term of governing for organizations, like universities' boards of regents. There's a Regent cruise lines, too.
For the heck of it, I Googled "hiat" to see what would come up. Let's just say it's an acronym used for a lot of different purposes, none that jumped out at me.
Was anything attached to the battery?