Edward Richard Werm has written:
'Manganous oxalate as a primary standard and a study of the Volhard method for the determination of manganese' -- subject(s): Manganese, Manganous oxalate, Volumetric analysis
werm ets
in the corner of his room
Worms are Earth's ultimate composers They will eat almost anything but they especially love cow manure. Their waste product is a mucus covered bundle of nutrients called a casting. Worms that live near the soil surface eat "organic matter," such as fallen leaves and dead grass. They also eat the small organisms that live on plants, such as bacteria, fungi, and algae. Worms that live deeper underground basically eat a lot of raw dirt, which is mostly mineral matter, or ground up rock. This doesn't mean that they digest the mineral matter. They probably are eating the fungi and bacteria that live on the dirt particles.
The World Egyptian Rite Masons was a small pseudo-Masonic order created by and largely consisting of Warren Rodgers of Pontiac, MI after Frank Ripel expelled him from MEAPRMM, another small pseudo-Masonic order recognized unrecognized by any other Masonic body. Both WERM and MEAPRMM are revivals of the rite of Memphis-Misraim. With Rodgers' death in late 2014, the order is presumed extinct.
If you mean astronomically, a "worn hole", then it's a "shortcut" that lets you "warp" but not at an amazing speed but more like through a tunnel. The fabric of space can be bent and every so often a "worm hole" appears because 2 parts that are notably are too close together. For example, if you were to look at a piece of paper from one end to the other. As you can tell, the distances are pretty far if you were to scale it. Then, bend that paper into half therefore those ends would touch. imagine pushing a staple through that end part; it goes from one end to the other. If it were at the distance(before fold), the staple would need to be alot longer, to which it's pretty unrealistic. Now if you were at the sharp points of the staple, and if you went from one end to the other instantly, that's a "worn hole".