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Volume 330:1909-1910 June 30, 1994 Number 26
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Salt and Water in Culture and Medicine

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By Poul Astrup, with Peter Bie and Hans Chr. Engell. 287 pp., illustrated. Copenhagen, Denmark, Munksgaard, 1993. DKK 350. ISBN 87-16-11226-1.

Does it interest you, dear reader, that the human use of salt began with the start of agriculture on the banks of the Tigris and the Euphrates in the seventh or eighth millennium B.C.; that before that the human need for salt was met by eating fish, birds, and mammals of various sizes; that the Egyptians used salt for embalming by packing bodies in it for one to two months before wrapping them in cloth; that sodium sulfate was first produced by Johann Rudolf Glauber (1604-1668), thus originating our present-day Glauber's salt; that Sir Humphry Davy, who first isolated sodium . . . [Full Text of this Article]




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