Minerals For Life
MINERALS FOR LIFE
Everything
in the physical world is made of mineral elements.What are they, how do they work, and why are they important
for our health?
There
are 92 known stable elements.Scientists believe they were formed billions of years ago by heat and
pressure as the earth changed from clouds of gases into a solid planet.
There
is debate over what the elements really are.Some scientists such as Dr. Brian Andersen believe the
elements are frequencies of light, crystallized into form.His book, The Rhythms of Nature, contains an interesting circular table of the
elements.According to the quantum
theory, elements are composed of sub-atomic particles - electrons, protons and
neutrons.
BIOLOGICAL TRANSMUTATION
Most
scientists believe that once an element forms, it cannot change into another
element except using extreme heat or pressure, as in a nuclear reactor.
Dr.
Louis Kervan, a French scientist, performed simple experiments showing that
living organisms can change one element into another at room temperature.For example, hens do not eat much
calcium in their diet.However,
their eggs are rich in calcium.In
another experiment, seeds sprouted in sealed containers with only distilled
water contain different amounts of elements than unsprouted seeds.
These
experiments can be duplicated by any high school student.Dr. Kervan's book, Biological
Transmutations, is fascinating
reading.Unfortunately, the ideas
are so revolutionary they are ignored in mainstream physics and biology.
MINERALS FOR
LIFE
Life
on our planet is built around a number of chemical elements.Important elements include calcium,
magnesium, sodium, potassium, sulfur and phosphorus.These are sometimes called macro-minerals.Blood
levels of these elements remain fairly constant.Hair tissue levels vary tremendously, offering more
information about them.
Calcium, the structural element, is found mainly in our
bones.Calcium also regulates cell
membrane permeability to control nerve impulse transmission and muscle
contraction.It is important for
blood clotting, and it regulates hormonal secretion and cell division.
Good
food sources are dairy products such as cheese and yogurt.Smaller amounts are in milk, sardines,
egg yolks, almonds, sesame seeds, seaweed and dark green vegetables.Goat cheese is better than cowπs milk
cheese for most people because cows are often fed or injected with antibiotics,
female hormones and growth hormones.
Magnesium is named after the Greek city of Magnesia, where
large deposits of magnesium carbonate were found centuries ago.Magnesium is needed for over 500
enzymes that regulate sugar metabolism, energy production, cell membrane
permeability, and muscle and nerve conduction.
Foods
high in magnesium include milk, almonds, brazil nuts, cashews, whole soybeans
(but not tofu, tempeh or soy protein), parsnips, wheat bran, whole grains,
green vegetables, seafood, kelp and molasses.
Most
people need more magnesium than they are eating because food refining strips
away magnesium.Deficiency causes
muscle cramps, weakness, depression and fatigue.Magnesium works closely with potassium and is a calcium
antagonist.
Sodium helps regulate blood pressure, fluid balance,
transport of carbon dioxide, and affects cell membrane permeability and other
cell membrane functions.Deficiency causes fatigue and fluid imbalances such as low blood
pressure.
Food
sources include sea salt, seafood, eggs, beet greens, swiss chard, olives,
peas, and butter.Table salt is a
refined junk food.Most of the
minerals have been stripped away, and aluminum is often added as a flowing
agent.Use natural sea salt
instead.
Potassium is needed for regulation of the heart beat, fluid
balance and to maintain blood pressure.It is also needed for buffering the blood, and cell membrane effects
including nerve transmission and muscular contraction.Deficiency can cause cramps, fatigue
and heart irregularities.
Good
sources are herring, sardines, halibut, goose, most nuts and seeds, watercress,
garlic, lentils, spinach, artichokes, lima beans, swiss chard, avocados,
buckwheat, wheat bran, molasses, and kelp.Be sure to drink the water in which you cook vegetables to
obtain the potassium from the vegetables.
Phosphorus is required for energy production, DNA synthesis and
protein synthesis.It is also
needed for calcium metabolism, muscle contraction and cell membrane structure.
Excellent
sources include salmon, sardines, mackerel, snapper, whitefish, scallops, carp,
herring, liver, turkey, chicken, eggs, kidney, many nuts and seeds, chickpeas,
garlic, lentils, popcorn,soybeans, cheese, wheat, and chocolate.Animal-based sources of phosphorus are often absorbed better
than grains and beans that contain phytates.
Sulfur is an important element for digestion, joints,
detoxification, hair, skin and nails.Most dietary sulfur comes from sulfur-containing amino acids found
mainly in animal protein foods.Good sources are eggs, meats, and often smelly foods like garlic and
onions.Other sources are kale,
watercress, russels sprouts, horseradish, cabbage cauliflower and cranberries.
Vegetarians
can easily become deficient in sulfur if they do not eat eggs.Deficiency can affect hair, nails,
skin, joints, energy and the ability to detoxify poisons.
TRACE ELEMENTS
Though
needed in small amounts, trace minerals are essential for life.They include iron, copper, manganese,
zinc, chromium, selenium, lithium, cobalt, silicon, boron and others.Hair and blood are used to measure
these elements.
Iron
is required for transporting oxygen
in the blood, for detoxification and for energy production in the cells.Iron is found in lean meats, organ
meats, shellfish, molasses, beans, whole-grain cereals, and dark green
vegetables.Menstruating women and
children on poor diets are most commonly low in iron.
Copper, a feminine element,is associated with estrogen.It helps regulate female fertility and prevent
miscarriages.Copper is also
required for healthy arteries, pigments in hair and skin, blood formation,
energy production and for neurotransmitter substances such as dopamine.
Copper
sources include organ meats, nuts, seeds, beans, grains and chocolate.People with high tissue copper are
often bright, young-looking, creative and emotional.Excess copper is more common than deficiency today, due to
the use of copper water pipes, birth control pills, vegetarian diets and
stress.
Manganese is called the maternal element, because animals
deprived of this element do not nurture their young.Manganese is involved in cholesterol synthesis and bone
growth.It is also needed for
healthy tendons and ligaments, and for fat and sugar metabolism.Manganese sources are nuts, especially
walnuts,bran, corn, parsley, tea
and wheat germ.
Zinc, a masculine mineral, is essential for over 50 body
functions.These include the sense
of taste and smell, vision, growth, sexual development, digestive enzyme
production, male potency, prostate gland health, blood sugar regulation and
processing of alcohol.
Zinc
is very important for the joints, the skin, wound healing, and to prevent birth
defects.Zinc helps prevent
diabetes, acne, epilepsy and childhood hyperactivity, and helps detoxify heavy
metals.Adequate zinc has a calming
effect and is needed to regenerate all body tissues.
Refined
food is very low in zinc.According to Dr. Carl Pfeiffer, MD, PhD, the entire human population is
borderline zinc deficient.Good
sources of zinc are herring, oysters, clams, wheat bran, oatmeal, wheat germ,
colostrum, liver, beef, lamb, and chicken thighs.Vegetarians run a high risk of zinc deficiency.
Chromium.A desert rodent called the sand rat
develops diabetes when fed a laboratory diet.When returned to the desert, the diabetes goes away.Extensive research indicates the
problem with the laboratory food is a lack of chromium.
Chromium
is essential to for insulin metabolism.It can also help lower cholesterol.Chromium deficiency is very common, especially in
middle-aged and older people. Food sources of chromium are brewers yeast,
liver, kidney, beef, whole wheat bread, wheat germ, beets, mushrooms and beer.
Selenium
is an important trace element.It is needed for protein synthesis,
helps the body get rid of toxic cadmium and mercury, and is needed for
antioxidant production (glutathione peroxidase).As an anti-oxidant, it may help prevent cancer and birth
defects. Good sources of selenium are garlic, yeast, liver, eggs, wheat germ
and brazil nuts.Human milk
contains six times as much selenium as cowπs milk.
Refined
food loses a lot of selenium (and other trace elements).For example, brown rice has 15 times as
much selenium as white rice.Whole
wheat bread has twice as much selenium as white bread.It is an excellent mineral to
supplement.
Lithium has a calming effect on the nervous system.It is found in many natural foods.
Cobalt is essential for life as part of the vitamin B12
molecule.Vitamin B12 is required
for the nervous system and blood formation.It is found in animal products.Deficiencies usually only occur in strict vegetarians, those
with impaired digestion,and the
elderly who have difficulty absorbing vitamin B12.
Iodine is required for the thyroid gland and the regulation
of metabolism. Good sources are seafood, sea vegetables and sea salt.Boron helps maintain female hormone production and bone
integrity.Boron is found in many
foods.Silicon is important for the bones and skin.Food sources include lettuce, parsnips,
asparagus, dandelion greens, rice bran, horseradish, onion, spinach and
cucumbers, and in herbs such as horsetail.
Trace
minerals often work in pairs or triplets.The interaction of minerals in the body is a complex and interesting
subject.There are many other
trace minerals such as molybdenum, vanadium, bromine, germanium, nickel, tin,
cesium, rubidium, strontium, gold, silver, titanium, tritium and others.
The
only way to obtain all these elements is to eat natural foods grown on
mineralized soil.Dr. Weston
Price, DDS, studied healthy native tribes around the world.He found they were eating about 4-10
times the vitamins and minerals of the average American living on refined and
processed foods.
TOXIC MINERALS
Toxic
metals act like replacement parts that do not measure up to the originals.Imagine you live in a wooden house and
over the years the wood rots or becomes damaged.Instead of replacing them with the correct boards, you use
whatever is around such as tar paper, cardboard, twigs or tree branches.Your house might still stand for a
while, but it will lose its structural integrity.When the body is missing vital minerals in the diet such as
calcium, magnesium, potassium and zinc, it absorbs toxic minerals from the
environment to keep functioning.
Some
minerals have different valences, some of which are toxic.An example is chromium.Hexavalent chromium is beneficial but
trivalent chromium is toxic.Still
other vital minerals may become toxic if they are in the wrong place or are
unusable by the body.This is
sometimes called biounvailable.Calcium, for instance, is needed in the bones.When it accumulates in the arteries, joints, kidneys and
elsewhere it becomes toxic.
Still
other vital minerals may accumulate in the liver and in other organs to balance
the sodium/potassium ratio or some other vital mineral ratio.This occurs with iron and
manganese.Thus the subject of
toxic metals is a bit more complex than just dividing minerals into good and
bad ones.
These
include lead, mercury, cadmium, arsenic, aluminum, fluoride and others.These often function in enzymes to some
extent, but not nearly as well as the physiological mineral.All toxic metals are neurotoxic.They contribute to hundreds of health
conditions.
Lead contributes to over 100 human conditions, including
neuromuscular and bone diseases, fractures, mental retardation, hyperactivity,
anemia, and many others.Some
historians believe the Roman Empire fell because lead water pipes slowly
poisoned the people and decreased their strength and intelligence.Sources of lead include old paint,
inks, pesticides, a few hair dyes, solder and other metal products.
Cadmium contributes to high blood pressure, heart disease,
cancer, fatigue, arthritis, violence, infections, back pain and other
conditions.Sources are cigarette
or marijuana smoke, refined foods and tap water.
Mercury toxicity is present in almost everyone today.Mercury is found in silver amalgam
dental fillings, tuna and swordfish, contact lens solution, vaccines and
various other products.Mercury
toxicity can contribute to hypothyroidism, impaired immune system, digestive
problems such as yeast infections, emotional difficulties, learning
disabilities, ADHD and many other conditions.
Aluminum is associated with memory impairment and Alzheimerπs
disease. Aluminum is widely used in beverage cans, aluminum foils,
antiperspirants, antacids, and aluminum cookware.Peppermint, spearmint and wintergreen are naturally high in aluminum.
Fluoride
contributes to brown staining of the
teeth, weakened bones, hip fractures, mental impairment, birth defects and
cancer.Fluoride compounds are
found in pesticides, air pollution, toothpastes, and are added to many water
supplies.Foods processed with
water including baby foods and juices often contain too much fluoride.
Large,
worldwide studies show little or no benefit of fluoride for tooth decay,
contrary to many news reports.Only the United States and Britain continue to add toxic fluoride
compounds to drinking water.
Arsenic contributes to liver and kidney damage, weakness,
diarrhea, muscle spasms, headaches and other symptoms.Sources include pesticides, beer, tap
water, table salt, paints and other chemical products.
LAWS OF
MINERALS
1) To obtain vital minerals,
eat fresh, natural foods.Refined
and junk foods usually have their minerals stripped away.If you donπt eat plenty of vital
minerals, your body will take up toxic metals as substitutes.
2) Eat a variety of
foods.It is impossible to get all
the minerals one needs on a limited diet.Donπt eat the same food every day.Vary your proteins, carbohydrates and vegetables.
3) Use supplements.Herbs and natural supplements include
kelp, dulse, wheat germ, condiments and brewers yeast.Be careful with so-called colloidal
mineral supplements from clay deposits.These often contain aluminum, lead and other toxic metals.
4) Avoid sources of toxic
metals as much as possible.
5) Women, for healthy
pregnancies and happy children, improve your mineral nutrition before getting
pregnant.Toxic metals and mineral
deficiencies are passed on to children.
6) To get rid of toxic
metals, five methods can be used together.Avoid exposure, improve your rate of metabolism, and take
chelating agents such as vitamin C.Also take antagonists such as selenium for cadmium, and improve the
functioning of your organs of elimination such as the liver, kidneys, skin and
colon.Ways to improve these
organs include skin brushing, saunas, steam baths, massage, enemas, colonic
irrigation, herbs, vitamins and homeopathics.
Resources
1. Andersen, B.D., The
Rhythms of Nature, Harmonic Spiral,
CA, 1999.
2. Ford Heritage, Composition
and Facts About Food, Health
Research, CA 1971.
3. Jensen, B., The
Chemistry of Man, Bernard Jensen,
Escondido, CA 1983.
4. Kervan, C. L., Biological
Transmutations, Beekman Publishers,
Inc., NY, 1998.
5. Kutsky, R., Handbook of
Vitamins, Minerals and Hormones, Van
Nostrand Reinhold Co., NY, 1981.
6. Pfeiffer, C., Mental
and Elemental Nutrients, Keats
Publishing, CT, 1975.
7. Price, W., Nutrition
and Physical Degeneration,
Price-Pottenger Nutrition Foundation, CA, 1945, 1979.
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