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Re: Confused about Sea Salt

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http://www.healingnaturallybybee.com/articles/salt3.php

Ocean water has the same mineral structure and salinity that our body

fluids - blood plasma, intracellular fluid, amneotic fluid. A developing

fetus lives in a small sea in its mother?s womb. It is critical that we

replace minerals the body uses on a daily basis. Natural Celtic Salt

contains all of the 80 original vital elements in their original ocean

percentage and concentration.

From this site:

http://www.herballadies.com/p281.htm

--

Artistic Grooming- Hurricane WV

http://www.stopthethyroidmadness.com/

http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/NaturalThyroidHormonesADRENALS/

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I read the article you referenced. What are her credentials? From what I can

gather, she is just a lay person as we all are. Cetlic Sea salt is NOT a good

source of trace minerals. Why would anyone purveying health information glibly

state that you can get all the selenium you need from Celtic Sea Salt when, in

actual fact you can't.

By admission of the makers of Celtic Sea Salt that it

doesn't contain even negligible amounts of any minerals except

sodium and chloride, to recommend Sea Salt as a reliable source for

minerals such as zinc, copper, manganese, iodine, chromium,

vanadium, selenium, molybdenum, boron, silicon and germanium is

just irresponsible.

Pamela

wrote:

http://www.healingnaturallybybee.com/articles/salt3.php

Ocean water has the same mineral structure and salinity that our body

fluids - blood plasma, intracellular fluid, amneotic fluid. A developing

fetus lives in a small sea in its mother?s womb. It is critical that we

replace minerals the body uses on a daily basis. Natural Celtic Salt

contains all of the 80 original vital elements in their original ocean

percentage and concentration.

From this site:

http://www.herballadies.com/p281.htm

--

Artistic Grooming- Hurricane WV

http://www.stopthethyroidmadness.com/

http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/NaturalThyroidHormonesADRENALS/

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You are not mentioning TRACE minerals but main mineras. Sea salt is one

of the VERY best sources for TRACE minerals as thta is all that is

needed.. traces. Sorry but I have read this on too many docotr's sites

as well that it is the perfect blend of trace mineral and matches

intracellular fluid exactly. Supplementing TRACE minerals you cna easily

fgo too hig as only traces are needed and Celtic sea salt is 20% minerals.

--

Artistic Grooming- Hurricane WV

http://www.stopthethyroidmadness.com/

http://health.groups.yahoo.com/group/NaturalThyroidHormonesADRENALS/

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I didn't read the article or her claims, but sea salt is a good source of

" trace " minerals. Not large quantities a person might need like in selenium.

Sea veggies are also a good source. As long as the salt is not processed and

refined but dried naturally, it retains the minerals. 70-80 trace minerals

on average. Do you have a source to dispute the trace mineral count? I would

be interested in reading it if so.

Cheri

-----Original Message-----

I read the article you referenced. What are her credentials? From what I

can gather, she is just a lay person as we all are. Cetlic Sea salt is NOT a

good source of trace minerals. Why would anyone purveying health information

glibly state that you can get all the selenium you need from Celtic Sea Salt

when, in actual fact you can't.

By admission of the makers of Celtic Sea Salt that it

doesn't contain even negligible amounts of any minerals except

sodium and chloride, to recommend Sea Salt as a reliable source for

minerals such as zinc, copper, manganese, iodine, chromium,

vanadium, selenium, molybdenum, boron, silicon and germanium is

just irresponsible.

Pamela

.

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I see opinions at both those sites, but not a sinlge referenced study. I

was hoping that an actual mineral analysis of blood, plasma, or

intracellular fluids to compare with a mineral analysis of sea salt or

celtic salt would be quoted to substantiate the otherwise unsupported

claims.

sol

wrote:

> http://www.healingnaturallybybee.com/articles/salt3.php

>

> Ocean water has the same mineral structure and salinity that our body

> fluids - blood plasma, intracellular fluid, amneotic fluid. A developing

> fetus lives in a small sea in its mother?s womb. It is critical that we

> replace minerals the body uses on a daily basis. Natural Celtic Salt

> contains all of the 80 original vital elements in their original ocean

> percentage and concentration.

>

> From this site:

> http://www.herballadies.com/p281.htm

>

>

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The dogma about salt DOES apply to the poison, table salt. I had swelling ankles

every summer that were enormous and painful to the touch. Doc said cut out salt.

I did. Didn't really help that much and was horrible, as I like salt. I finally

found these groups and heard about and got the book " Salt your way to Health "

and once I started using small amount of Redmond's or Celtic salt in my daily

water, my summer swelling was reduced to a bare minimum, even in the hottest,

most humid weather the Midwest can throw at me. For me, that in itself was

miraculous.

Cathy C.

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The dogma about salt DOES apply to the poison, table salt. I had swelling ankles

every summer that were enormous and painful to the touch. Doc said cut out salt.

I did. Didn't really help that much and was horrible, as I like salt. I finally

found these groups and heard about and got the book " Salt your way to Health "

and once I started using small amount of Redmond's or Celtic salt in my daily

water, my summer swelling was reduced to a bare minimum, even in the hottest,

most humid weather the Midwest can throw at me. For me, that in itself was

miraculous.

Cathy C.

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I don't have the reference any more, but a scientist took a dog and replaced his

blood with sea water, and in 24 hours or some such time the dog was producing

red bloods cells once again. Sea water matches our blood in many ways.

Cathy C.

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Which of the ocean plasma would one use. I am a little confused and

it is very expensive..

Is it like the celtic sea salt too.

Thanks

Ellen

> >

> > I don't have the reference any more, but a scientist took a dog

and replaced his blood

> with sea water, and in 24 hours or some such time the dog was

producing red bloods cells

> once again. Sea water matches our blood in many ways.

> >

> > Cathy C.

> >

> >

> >

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