Re: CSHome Made Gatorade

2004-06-18 Thread Dave Darrin
the first carpenters make their own hammers? Dave William Missett wrote: The industrial revolution began in the 1750s. - Original Message - From: Dave ddar...@centurytel.net To: silver-list@eskimo.com Sent: Thursday, June 17, 2004 2:06 PM Subject: Re: CSHome Made Gatorade 1942! Wasn't

Re: CSHome Made Gatorade

2004-06-17 Thread Ode Coyote
Yea, plus I would think that sea salt would include virtually every metallic salt possible including tin, lead, mercury, arsenic... Ode At 08:06 AM 6/16/2004 -0700, you wrote: I would think the purer of the two would be the common salt as it was formed long before the

Re: CSHome Made Gatorade

2004-06-17 Thread Garnet
It is sodium chloride. Which is table salt and also one of the salts in sea salt. The use of table salt is for the sodium. Does Gatorade have any chloride in it? If so then it would also form silver chloride salts. Or do silver chlorides only form in the presence of electrical current, as in the

Re: CSHome Made Gatorade

2004-06-17 Thread Nenah Sylver
- Original Message - From: Garnet garnetri...@earthlink.net To: Silver List silver-list@eskimo.com Sent: Thursday, June 17, 2004 8:16 AM Subject: Re: CSHome Made Gatorade But I can't see how you can take CS and avoid any substance that would combine with silver as a salt the whole

Re: CSHome Made Gatorade

2004-06-17 Thread Marshall Dudley
Ode Coyote wrote: Yea, plus I would think that sea salt would include virtually every metallic salt possible including tin, lead, mercury, arsenic... Ode Tin - 0.01% Lead - 0/012% Mercury - 0.0013% Arsnic - 0.12% Marshall -- The Silver List is a moderated forum for

Re: CSHome Made Gatorade

2004-06-17 Thread Dave
Marshal: Is that an average of the whole ocean or a figure taken from a sample carefully selected for optimal results (possibly from an iceberg) ? Dave Marshall Dudley wrote: Ode Coyote wrote: Yea, plus I would think that sea salt would include virtually every metallic salt possible

Re: CSHome Made Gatorade

2004-06-17 Thread Marshall Dudley
Garnet wrote: It is sodium chloride. Which is table salt and also one of the salts in sea salt. The use of table salt is for the sodium. Does Gatorade have any chloride in it? If so then it would also form silver chloride salts. Or do silver chlorides only form in the presence of electrical

Re: CSHome Made Gatorade

2004-06-17 Thread Marshall Dudley
It took the amount of solids in sea water and then took the amounts of each element in sea water, and divided each by the total solids and multiplied by 100% to get the percentage of that element in what is left if you evaporate the water. The numbers were obtained from the 3nd edition of the CRC

Re: CSHome Made Gatorade

2004-06-17 Thread Dave
I'm sure that mercury is also present as well as many others but it doesn't show as much of an amount. The question is where were the samples taken for the report. Was it chosen from an area friendly to those making the money or a scientific average of the oceans of the planet. I probably

Re: CSHome Made Gatorade

2004-06-17 Thread Marshall Dudley
It came originally from The Ocean by Sverdrup Johnson and Fleming, Copyright 1942 Prentice-Hall, Inc. Since the oceans have been mixing for millions of years, I would not expect a significant difference from one place to the other, as long as the sample was taken far from the mouth of any rivers

Re: CSHome Made Gatorade

2004-06-17 Thread Dave
1942! Wasn't that about the time of the beginning of the industrial revolution? And our sinking of many ships, both ours and our enemy. Of course it would be less likely to be money driven, but it would be a bit out of date pollution wise. Some of the old books are great but not in this

RE: CSHome Made Gatorade

2004-06-17 Thread James Holmes
to point out numbers that do not add up. JOH -Original Message- From: Dave [mailto:ddar...@centurytel.net] Sent: Thursday, June 17, 2004 10:58 AM To: silver-list@eskimo.com Subject: Re: CSHome Made Gatorade I'm sure that mercury is also present as well as many others but it doesn't show

Re: CSHome Made Gatorade

2004-06-17 Thread Stuff
That makes sense. No more for me. stuff At 10:14 AM 6/17/2004 -0400, you wrote: Ode Coyote wrote: Yea, plus I would think that sea salt would include virtually every metallic salt possible including tin, lead, mercury, arsenic... Ode Tin - 0.01% Lead - 0/012%

Re: CSHome Made Gatorade

2004-06-17 Thread William Missett
The industrial revolution began in the 1750s. - Original Message - From: Dave ddar...@centurytel.net To: silver-list@eskimo.com Sent: Thursday, June 17, 2004 2:06 PM Subject: Re: CSHome Made Gatorade 1942! Wasn't that about the time of the beginning of the industrial revolution

CSHome Made Gatorade

2004-06-16 Thread Garnet
Ran across a recipe for home made Gatorade. Four cups of fruit juice (not from concentrate), four cups water and one teaspoon table salt. Makes one quart. Have not tried it yet but thought of the discussions on Gatorade on this list when I found this. Garnet -- The Silver List is a moderated

CSHome Made Gatorade

2004-06-16 Thread Wayne Fugitt
Morning Garnet, Ran across a recipe for home made Gatorade. Four cups of fruit juice (not from concentrate), four cups water and one teaspoon table salt. Makes one quart. That sounds like Gatorade PLUS, does it not? Why not add a few more minerals or buffered vitamin C ? Many people

Re: CSHome Made Gatorade

2004-06-16 Thread Garnet
What is SuperGram III? I was thinking of the use of mixing Gatorade and CS, and those of us who do not like Gatorade, when I posted the home made recipe. Garnet On Wed, 2004-06-16 at 05:27, Wayne Fugitt wrote: Morning Garnet, Ran across a recipe for home made Gatorade. Four cups of fruit

Re: CSHome Made Gatorade

2004-06-16 Thread Wayne Fugitt
I was thinking of the use of mixing Gatorade and CS, and those of us who do not like Gatorade, when I posted the home made recipe. I realized that. Seems Gatorade is over priced. Your formula may cost even more using the real juice. Not being a chemist, I have failed to understand the

Re: CSHome Made Gatorade

2004-06-16 Thread William Missett
: Re: CSHome Made Gatorade I have often read about the negatives of table salt. Is the table salt used in this mixture the common salt or sea salt? Ran across a recipe for home made Gatorade. Four cups of fruit juice (not from concentrate), four cups water and one teaspoon table salt

Re: CSHome Made Gatorade

2004-06-16 Thread Wayne Fugitt
At 07:38 AM 6/16/04, you wrote: Never use table salt. It is only sodium and chloride, with the other 82 trace elements and minerals removed. Use only pure sea salt, the less processing the better. Sodium and Chloride are both essential nutrients. What is bad about Sodium Chloride?

Re: CSHome Made Gatorade

2004-06-16 Thread William Missett
:52 AM Subject: Re: CSHome Made Gatorade At 07:38 AM 6/16/04, you wrote: Never use table salt. It is only sodium and chloride, with the other 82 trace elements and minerals removed. Use only pure sea salt, the less processing the better. Sodium and Chloride are both essential nutrients

Re: CSHome Made Gatorade

2004-06-16 Thread Stuff
Subject: Re: CSHome Made Gatorade At 07:38 AM 6/16/04, you wrote: Never use table salt. It is only sodium and chloride, with the other 82 trace elements and minerals removed. Use only pure sea salt, the less processing the better. Sodium and Chloride are both essential nutrients. What

Re: CSHome Made Gatorade

2004-06-16 Thread Dave
You might consider also that sea salt comes from the planet's septic tank. Would you imbibe anything from your own septic tank? Dave Wayne Fugitt wrote: At 07:38 AM 6/16/04, you wrote: Never use table salt. It is only sodium and chloride, with the other 82 trace elements and minerals

Re: CSHome Made Gatorade

2004-06-16 Thread Dave
I would think the purer of the two would be the common salt as it was formed long before the industrial boom that polluted the oceans ( the planets septic tank). Isn't it bad enough that the runoff from the highest mountain top to the lowest beach ends up in the oceans, without our eating it,

Re: CSHome Made Gatorade

2004-06-16 Thread Stuff
Can any microbe live in dried salt...of whatever kind? stuff At 07:43 AM 6/16/2004 -0700, you wrote: You might consider also that sea salt comes from the planet's septic tank. Would you imbibe anything from your own septic tank? Dave Wayne Fugitt wrote: At 07:38 AM 6/16/04, you wrote: