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Corentin Louis Kervran

Corentin Louis Kervran (1901 - 1983) was a French scientist.

From 1935 on Louis Kervran collected facts and performed experiments which led him to postulate that transmutation of elements occurred in living organisms. Among his supposed evidence were fatal accidents from carbon monoxide poisoning when none was detectable in the air and the observation that Sahara oilfield workers excreted a daily average of 320 mg more calcium than they ingested without decalcification occurring.

His findings were publicly discussed in France, Belgium, Switzerland, Italy and Japan after 1959, when he decided to communicate them, but ultimately not accepted by the scientific community.

Kervran was nominated for the 1975 Nobel Prize in Physiology. He was member of the New York Academy of Science as well as Director of Conferences of the Paris University Member of Conseil d'Hygiene de la Seine.

Louis Kervran wrote several books on his findings:

There are two translations of Kervran's work into English:

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