calcium on feet perhaps your P.H. is to low, which means you are possibly to acidic. eating veggies and fruits help this out allot, so does cutting back on meat at least for a while. When your PH is off then trace mineral deposits can come out of your bodily fluids; blood, urine, etc. and form deposits such as kidney stones and calcium deposits even around joints ie, Arthritis, bursitis. Also drinking proper amounts of water help this as well. As for the hemorrhages that one I do not know, but could be related to other parts of your body affecte dby PH as well.
Calcification of arteries, small deposits of calcium in the veins
Petichiae are small purplish spots on the skin of the body caused by small blood vesicle or capillary hemorrhages.
If these pinpoints are in the brain the it would beNMDA Antagonist Neurotoxicity (Olney's Lesions)
Sand, broken down crustacean's, calcium from animal bones, salt deposits, small quantities of waste materials from sewage and industry
Very small pinpoint hemorrhages under the skin are known as what?
Matching small deposits with large loans and large deposits with small loans
Thrombotic thrombocytopenic purpura (TTP)
true. wet macular degeneration is damage to the macula that develops as a complication as the disease progresses. this damage is caused by the formation of new blood vessels that produce small hemorrhages that usually result in rapid and severe vision loss.
Oil Reserves are big and oil deposits are small.
if you do not want to use muriatic acid another way is to have it sandblasted with beads - test small area first to ensure this willnot scratch the type of tiles you have.
Sediment trapping and the growth and metabolic activities of matlike cyanobacteria colonies contribute to the creation of stromatolites. Small particles of calcium carbonate settle onto the sticky matlike colonies of cyanobacteria forming thin layers of calcium carbonate. The cyanobacteria then build up over the calcium carbonate layer (so as not to be buried and killed) producing another sticky surface where more fine particles of calcium carbonate can be trapped.
If the red lines run in the direction of the growth of the nail, they are called splinter hemorrhages as they look like a red splinter under the nail. The hemorrhages may be caused by tiny clots that damage the small capillaries under the nails. They can be a sign of a number of diseases: infection of the heart valves called endocarditis, damage from swelling of the blood vessels (vasculitis) or tiny clots that damage the small capillaries (microemboli).