What are the hours of work? clarithromycin patient leaflet Stephen Mackessy and a team of researchers from the University of Northern Colorado and the University of Colorado at Boulder took a different approach, and looked to see if the chemical tracking device was inside snake's venom instead of whatever it was hunting. They extracted venom from a group of western diamondback rattlesnakes, and broke down the poison into smaller component parts. Next, they injected either the whole venom, the venom fractions, or water into different mice. The rodents were then placed in the snakes' cages.
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