Nik Fattey

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Nik Fattey

Nik Fattey

@NFattey

Fattey Beer Founder | Hockey Analyst | Sharing insights & banter | Here for the wins, the beers, and the memes | @fatteybeer

Buffalo, New York Katılım Eylül 2008
583 Takip Edilen1.7K Takipçiler
Ra Cha Cha #SlavaUkraini
Ra Cha Cha #SlavaUkraini@HeyRaChaCha·
Did you know that Buffalo City Hall sits atop a major sewer line? Insert joke here 😂
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Ra Cha Cha #SlavaUkraini
Ra Cha Cha #SlavaUkraini@HeyRaChaCha·
Did you know the oldest sewer in Buffalo is under Pennsylvania Street? 🤓
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Nik Fattey
Nik Fattey@NFattey·
Wow! What a great week in Minneapolis. Our boys would have beaten the Soviets today. They all played so hard. Best game of the year. St. Francis National Champions! 🏆
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Nik Fattey
Nik Fattey@NFattey·
@georgeabtsports It’s good to see that hockey is growing. The school district has like 24k high school students. SF has like 400…
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George M. Perry
George M. Perry@georgeabtsports·
@NFattey It just seems wrong that a school from Texas (Frisco, of all places) is in the high school hockey title game. Bring that title home to where it belongs!!
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Nik Fattey
Nik Fattey@NFattey·
Finals tomorrow. Let’s go!
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Nik Fattey
Nik Fattey@NFattey·
The fun in Minnesota continues. St. Francis plays in the USA Hockey High School National semi-final today at 3pm CST. Exciting times
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Nate Geary
Nate Geary@NateGearySports·
Decent backdrop
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Nik Fattey
Nik Fattey@NFattey·
@BuffaloSabres @NHL Awesome Sabre. George is one of the real ones. Never too big time. Understands the team rhythm better than all of us. Most pro-Sabres guy and player positive in the universe. Buffalo is lucky to have him and he deserves the glory. What an accomplishments. Congrats!
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Buffalo Sabres
Buffalo Sabres@BuffaloSabres·
Countless stories, late nights, and incredible memories. Here’s to many more, George! 👏 Congrats on 2,500 @NHL games!
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Nik Fattey
Nik Fattey@NFattey·
Watched Tucker recently. It holds up very well. Great movie for entrepreneurs, dreamers, innovators. The movie is almost 40 years old and the themes are the same. Many people in power do not want you to succeed.
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Nik Fattey
Nik Fattey@NFattey·
Sam Carrick played 9 seasons in the minors before becoming an NHL regular. Keep working kids. If you don’t make your U9 AAA team, your hockey dreams are not over.
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Max Loeb
Max Loeb@loebsleads·
@ Buffalo locals/foodies What are some non-Wing related restaurants/staples that I NEED to try while I’m here for March Madness? Have heard Beef on Weck a lot… Lmk ⤵️
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Nik Fattey
Nik Fattey@NFattey·
With St. Francis hockey at the USA Hockey High School National Championships. Boys are playing well! Taking in the sights of the Twin Cities between games. Maybe I’ll dust off my resume…
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Polymarket
Polymarket@Polymarket·
BREAKING: Oil prices in Oman have surged to $167 a barrel.
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Ra Cha Cha #SlavaUkraini
Ra Cha Cha #SlavaUkraini@HeyRaChaCha·
@NFattey Will your beer make my bones glow? x.com/archeohistorie…
Archaeo - Histories@archeohistories

In 1980, a bioarchaeologist at Emory University named George Armelagos was studying ancient human bones from Sudanese Nubia, the kingdom that flourished along the Nile south of Egypt between roughly 350-550 CE, when something stopped him. Under ultraviolet light, the bones glowed. They fluoresced with a distinctive yellow-green color that Armelagos recognized immediately, because the same glow appeared in the bones of modern patients who had been treated with tetracycline. The antibiotic binds tightly to calcium and phosphorus in bone tissue as the body metabolizes it, leaving a permanent fluorescent marker. What Armelagos was seeing in bones nearly two thousand years old was chemically identical to what he saw in twentieth-century medical subjects. The archaeological community was skeptical. The received history of antibiotics began with Alexander Fleming’s discovery of penicillin in 1928, and tetracycline itself was not isolated until 1948. The idea that a pre-literate population in the Nile valley had been routinely ingesting it seemed implausible, and the initial findings were dismissed as post-mortem contamination from soil bacteria. Armelagos spent three more decades building the case. He eventually partnered with Mark Nelson, a leading tetracycline specialist at Paratek Pharmaceuticals, who agreed to perform a definitive chemical analysis. The process required dissolving the ancient bones in hydrogen fluoride, one of the most corrosive and dangerous acids in existence. What the resulting liquid-chromatography mass-spectrometry analysis found was not a trace of tetracycline. The bones were saturated with it. Multiple tetracycline variants were identified, including chlortetracycline and oxytetracycline, in concentrations indicating sustained exposure beginning in early childhood and continuing throughout life. Ninety percent of the Nubian individuals tested showed the labeling. The exposure had not been accidental or occasional. It had been lifelong and deliberate. The source was their beer. Ancient Egyptian and Nubian brewing began with grain, typically emmer wheat or barley, which in that region was naturally contaminated with Streptomyces, a soil bacterium that produces tetracycline as a metabolic byproduct. The grain was germinated, made into bread, then incompletely baked to preserve an active center, and finally fermented in vats of water. The standard practice was to seed each new batch with ten percent of the previous one, which kept the Streptomyces culture alive and active from batch to batch in a continuous chain. The resulting brew was thick, sour, low in alcohol, and highly nutritious. Everyone drank it, including children as young as two years old. The critical question Armelagos could not fully resolve was whether the Nubians understood what they were doing. The consensus among researchers is that they almost certainly did not know the mechanism. They had no concept of bacteria, no understanding of antibiotics as a drug class, and no language for what tetracycline was doing in their bodies. What they likely did know, accumulated through generations of observation and passed down as practical knowledge, was that this particular preparation of beer had medicinal effects. Ancient Egyptian and Jordanian medical texts record beer being used to treat gum disease, wounds, and other infections. The brewing method that produced tetracycline appears to have been deliberately maintained and refined over centuries, not by any understanding of the chemistry involved, but by the accumulated recognition that it worked. #archaeohistories

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