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The Minerals in Your Food

THERE was a time when the role that minerals play in nutrition was not appreciated. The emphasis in nutrition was on proteins, fats (such as butter, lard, oils) and carbohydrates . Then men began to discern that good health depended also upon other factors, such as vitamins, and that even certain minerals, found in the body in very small amounts, were indispensable. Concerning these minerals we are told that they carry a clear message: ň€śMan cannot exist elsewhere.ň€ť Also that ň€śhad man [come into existence] on another planet, he would have had a different mineral composition.ň€ť This is just what we should expect in view of the Bibleň€™s account of creation as found at Genesis 2:7: ň€śJehovah God proceeded to form the man out of dust from the ground and to blow into his nostrils the breath of life, and the man came to be a living soul.ň€ť Interestingly, the fact that Jehovah God originally gave man ň€śall vegetation bearing seed .Ň .Ň . and every tree on which there is the fruit of a tree bearing seedň€ť as food is also borne out by a study of these minerals. While the body carefully guards many of these minerals, not so with potassium, obtained mostly from fruits and vegetables. Daily the body expels a certain amount of potassium regardless of how much is taken in, requiring daily consumption of potassium-rich foods. This has caused a team of leading nutritionists to ask, ň€śCould it be because man originally lived on fruits and vegetables?ň€ť Yes, undoubtedly that is the reason. Scientists today list over a hundred elements as being found on this earth. However, some of these are man-made. As many as sixty of the natural elements have been found in living things and some forty have been found in man. Not included here for special consideration are the four major elements described as ň€śhaving a molecular weight of 16 or less.ň€ť These account for 96 percent of the bodyň€™s composition. They include oxygen, 65 percent; carbon, 18 percent; hydrogen, 10 percent; nitrogen, 3 percent. The fact that 75 percent of the bodyň€™s composition is oxygen and hydrogen would seem to show the need of daily drinking sufficient liquids. ň€śMacroň€ť and ň€śMicroň€ť Minerals What is being considered here are the ň€śmacroň€ť minerals and ň€śmicroň€ť or ň€śtraceň€ť elements or minerals. The macro elements comprise a total of about 3.5 percent of the bodyň€™s composition. They exist in quantities of less than 3 percent and more than 1/100th of 1 percent.These are calcium, phosphorus, potassium, sulfur, sodium, chlorine and magnesium. The micro elements account for the remaining about 1/2 of 1 percent. Among the more important micro or trace elements are iron, manganese, copper, iodine, zinc, molybdenum, cobalt, fluorine, chromium and bromine. These various minerals have an importance in nutrition far beyond the extremely small amounts that are found in the body. Calcium, the major one of these, represents only about 1/70th of the bodyň€™s composition. And there is from 400 to 500 times as much calcium in the body as there is iron. Then again, there is twenty times as much iron as there is copper, and five times as much copper as there is iodine in the body. Yet iodine is essential to good health even though it is found in the body only to the extent of one part in 2.5 million or more. Man has still much to learn about the presence and value of these minerals in the body. As one medical journal expressed it: ň€śNew knowledge concerning minerals both macro and micro opens up bright vistas in the prevention and treatment of disease, as well as in the maintenance of optimal nutrition. .Ň .Ň . They offer a treasure-house of exciting opportunities for investigators.ň€ť Basically, the minerals in the body serve two functions. One is that of building blocks; the other is that of regulators of the bodyň€™s processes by combining with vitamins, with other minerals and with enzymes. In fact, a number of these minerals serve quite a variety of valuable purposes in the body. In considering information on minerals it is well to keep in mind that nutrition is by no means a science on which there is general agreement as there is with, say, mathematics and physics. There is some disagreement as to the exact proportions of these elements in the body, as to just where to draw the line between macro and micro elements and as to which trace elements are essential. But what is known can be very helpful.


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