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Question:

How do you get mountain horned lizard eggs to hatch?

My mountain horned lizard literally JUST laid 8 oval shaped eggs in her cage. We haven't touched anything yet. We've just fed her crickets, we would go out and get some and put some in her cage, and as soon as she ran out, we'd get her some more. They're laying in a nest, which is basically a hole that she dug in the bark substrate. What do I do with them, and how can I make them hatch?

Answer:

I don't have a problem with you posting this in the wrong section. I DO have a problem with you not doing the research and homework yourself. Turn off the stereo, get off the computer, get off your lazy butt, and do your own homework.
the exterior that anybody your insulating components and the condenser itself relax upon might no longer be rigid sufficient or stiff sufficient to permit you to insulate it so as that there is not any vibration transferred to the help shape itself. The majotity of the vibration is probably transferred to the help shape which then amplifies the concern. the sole way that i be conscious of of to resolve this type of subject is to the two stiffen the help shape, relocate the condenser to be closer a help wall, or construct a separate rigid help shape for the condenser which will unfold the condenser load over a much better area.
Do you mean what has highest R-factor per inch?
You don't say what you are trying to insulate and why. Are you trying to keep heat in or out; or are you trying to keep something cold? Many of the above materials are good for keeping warm air in a house from radiating out through the walls. Fiberglass works well inside walls as does expanded polystyrene, polyurethane foam. Rockwool, vermiculite and cellulose work well to insulate a ceiling when you blow in a 16 to 18 layer. They don't work in walls because they are loose and tend to pile up at the bottom, leaving the top of the wall empty. Metals such as aluminum, silver foil and gum wrappers are conductors of heat. Conducting heat is the opposite of insulating. In general, house insulation works by trapping pockets of dead air. As long as the air cannot move easily, it cannot conduct heat; therefore it acts as an insulator. The best insulating product, therefore, is the one that best traps the most air. I would probably select expanded polystyrene foam, extruded polystyrene foam and polyisocyanurate foam as the best insulators because they have closed cells full of air. Of course, if you want to insulate an electrical wire, then of the materials listed, rubber would be the best choice -- because it does not conduct electricity very well.

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