But if vegetables and fruits and flesh can not supply all the minerals needed for human beings?

■What if the first reason plants exist is to supply minerals to humans and animals?

■What if the first reason for the existence of animals is to provide minerals to humans who are hard to find vegetables?

■But if vegetables and fruits and flesh can not supply all the minerals needed for human beings?

■What if the cause of all chronic diseases except malnutrition and water shortages is mineral deficiency?

■So what if you need a substance that can get minerals directly without going through vegetables, fruits, or flesh?

■What if the reason for the existence of rock salt from drying up of seas raised by perceptual motion is for people who can not get natural salt because the seas are far away, and for animals that can not make natural salt by sea water?

■What if the first reason that fresh water exists is to make and drink your own natural salt water rich in minerals without going through the vegetables or fruits or flesh?

■What if all the wise men who`ve been obsessed with mineral food for the past 6,000 years haven't been missing this very easy and cheap natural mineral beverage to supply rich minerals to humans and animals?

■Has there been any scholar who organized the concept of natural salt like this for the past six thousand years?


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Mineral (nutrient)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

In the context of nutrition, a mineral is a chemical element required as an essential nutrient by organisms to perform functions necessary for life.

However, the four major structural elements in the human body by weight (oxygen, hydrogen, carbon, and nitrogen), are usually not included in lists of major nutrient minerals (nitrogen is considered a "mineral" for plants, as it often is included in fertilizers).

These four elements compose about 96% of the weight of the human body, and major minerals (macrominerals) and minor minerals (also called trace elements) compose the remainder.

Minerals, as elements, cannot be synthesized biochemically by living organisms.

Plants get minerals from soil.

Most of the minerals in a human diet come from eating plants and animals or from drinking water.

As a group, minerals are one of the four groups of essential nutrients, the others of which are vitamins, essential fatty acids, and essential amino acids.

The five major minerals in the human body are calcium, phosphorus, potassium, sodium, and magnesium.

All of the remaining elements in a human body are called "trace elements".

The trace elements that have a specific biochemical function in the human body are sulfur, iron, chlorine, cobalt, copper, zinc, manganese, molybdenum, iodine and selenium.

Most chemical elements that are ingested by organisms are in the form of simple compounds. Plants absorb dissolved elements in soils, which are subsequently ingested by the herbivores and omnivores that eat them, and the elements move up the food chain.

Larger organisms may also consume soil (geophagia) or use mineral resources, such as salt licks, to obtain limited minerals unavailable through other dietary sources.

Bacteria and fungi play an essential role in the weathering of primary elements that results in the release of nutrients for their own nutrition and for the nutrition of other species in the ecological food chain.

One element, cobalt, is available for use by animals only after having been processed into complex molecules (e.g., vitamin B12) by bacteria.

Minerals are used by animals and microorganisms for the process of mineralizing structures, called "biomineralization", used to construct bones, seashells, eggshells, exoskeletons and mollusc shells.

출처出處source ■ Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mineral_(nutrient)


Soil
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Soil is a mixture of organic matter, minerals, gases, liquids, and organisms that together support life.

Earth's body of soil, called the pedosphere, has four important functions:

as a medium for plant growth
as a means of water storage, supply and purification
as a modifier of Earth's atmosphere
as a habitat for organisms

All of these functions, in their turn, modify the soil.

출처出處source ■ Wikipedia
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Soil



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