Mineral Resources, the Only Reason We Humans can Work with Earth

Mineral resources, a majority of just ninety-two elements are the source of our work, play and existence here on Earth.
[image error]

Mineral resources that allow humanity to work and play on Earth. Without them not only would humans not have any activities … but they would simply not even exist.


4.4-5 Let’s Work with Earth: All Professions


Life isn’t all play. Most if not all adults work in one form or

another during their lifetimes, and their activity and employment

revolve around and include, directly or indirectly, “earthly

matter.”


We need basic mineral resources and elements to produce

the material things around us. Again, we’re talking basic needs.

Our spacecraft drill comes in handy once again as it moves

to an outcropping of solid rock. It looks like some mountain

areas in Afghanistan.


On land, we depend on mineral resources that allow us

to house our families in buildings fabricated from mud, tin,

brick, concrete, and grass. Our drill unearths tin in order to

create a roof for a farmhouse.


Other mineral resources provide heat for our homes and our

food in the form of coal, wood, gas, electricity, and uranium,

the last of which is transformed into electric energy in

nuclear power plants.


Everyday objects such as aluminium cooking vessels, clay or

porcelain eating vessels, iron farming tools, and glass or plastic

decorations come from the land. Other examples include steel

knives, iron fishhooks, silicon and carbon computer chips,

semiprecious jasper, and malachite jewelry stones, gold coins,

alloys of steel, iron, copper, and other metals.


These form the support networks for suspension bridges and

skyscrapers as well as ocean-going vessels and many other vehicles.

Galacti draws a periodic table with ninety-two elements

in order to refresh everyone’s memory about the chemistry

classes they’ve taken.


We don’t quiz everyone on the specific properties of each element or

which ones we use to create toasters, for example (iron, nickel,

and copper play a role). Nor do we detail how research and

manufacturing mix and match the periodic table elements from

chromium to magnesium to make all different types of compounds from

an array of mineral resources.


Another of our audience has just gone off duty as a police officer,

replete with a protective Kevlar vest. Sulfur, hydrogen, chlorine,

calcium, and sodium create this lifesaving material that can also be

used to make canoes, brakes, and even musical instruments.


All the elements that we know of in the Earth’s crust and

mantle, whether on dry land or under seabeds worldwide, are

the basis of every single object of work and play. Look at a list

of categories of industries, objects, and items in the Yellow

Pages or on eBay.


They’ve become so common and abundant to us that we don’t even

stop to think of their origin or the processes they undergo in relation

to other elements that bring them from the Earth to our hands.


Even those that work with people, such as counselors, teachers,

and health support, work with the basic elements of Earth because

that’s exactly what you and I, their clients, are composed of.


One of the reasons we’re taking Inventory of the Universe

in this first book of The Explanation is to see just how “down

to earth” life really is—to become aware of Earth and its

implications.


“You see, everything humans are and use on a daily basis

comes from the land and the mineral resources underfoot,”

Galacti says. “Earth provides and sustains our well-being, even

our food,” he says, grinning.


“Is anybody hungry?”


Let’s Eat from the Earth: Trace Minerals

Farmer Galacti, wearing work gear and boots, thinks he’d like

to sow seeds in the piece of arable land we’re on. After all,

humans living on the adjacent rocky land, which has become

an urban sprawl, would appreciate the crops. We depend on

harvested food supplies for survival, so human habitations are

often juxtaposed with their sustenance supply lines.


We could plant wheat here, and it would take four to six months

to grow (depending on soil temperature and whether it’s a spring or

winter crop), but future generations living in the rocky land

next door would appreciate having a direct line to food crops.


That’s why land is devoted to vital global crops, including

wheat, rice, corn, and soybeans as well as hundreds of others

in an endeavor to supply adequate foodstuffs. For example,

rice fields in Southeast Asia are located near water to irrigate

the crops and grow this staple of the Asian diet.


“We talked about trace minerals in the sea,” the police

officer says. “I read that they’re in the food we eat.”

Galacti offers cans (also made of elements from the Earth)

containing a fruit and vegetable juice blend. It’s healthy, of

course. It’s made of mixed vegetables and fruits. “This is for

later,” he says, “but for now I want you to look at the food

label; the ingredient list.


While you do, think about this: the fertile ground under your

feet contains trace elements your body needs, such as boron,

copper, and zinc.”


We read the ingredient list and notice that there is a space

to detail all the minerals in the juice: calcium, iron, phosphorus,

magnesium, zinc, manganese, and potassium.


While we drink the juice, a nutritionist in the group

remarks that all these minerals exist in infinitesimal amounts,

but they are abundant in soil, and can be absorbed by plants

that provide sources of food.


Today we know that these minerals are vital to human health.

For example, potassium helps control blood pressure, while zinc

boosts the immune system and can treat ear infections. Minerals are

only a fraction of our total body weight, if that, but they prevent disease

and deficiencies of them lead to serious conditions.


For example, one of our group members, a grandmother, has

osteoporosis. She knows she needs to eat calcium, but she’s surprised

to learn that a boron deficiency may also make her bones fragile.


In fact, we know that our bodies include about sixty

natural elements, six of which (oxygen, carbon, hydrogen,

nitrogen, calcium, and phosphorus) make up 99 percent of our

weight, with another five (potassium, sulfur, sodium, chlorine,

and magnesium) representing a tiny 0.85 percent.


The rest are trace elements found in infinitesimal quantities,

including radium, strontium, and uranium (considered radioactive)

as well as mercury, lead, and arsenic (considered poisonous) and

even gold, among others.


You humans are not the only ones that need nutrients and

mineral resources 
from the land,” Galacti says, turning over a layer

of soil and revealing several wriggling, squiggling earthworms.


The Explanation Blog Bonus

A very instructive documentary about mineral resources and their impact on humanity. From Ages past and their mysticism to our modern usages as the underpinnings of our material world.



Dig Deeper into The Explanation


Join The Explanation list to receive information and updates. Total privacy and you can unsubscribe at any time... but you won't want to!



TheExplanation.com



Email address:






This blog is part of chapter 4.4-5 from the book Inventory of the Universe.

See the index of the book Inventory of the the Universe to find a specific chapter and read it online.


Since you read all the way to here… you liked it

Please use the Social Network links to share ‘The Explanation‘ with your friends.

Learn how to play Take Inventory – The Game (free) that nourishes your neurons  and is taking the world by storm.


Purchase the paperback edition at Amazon – Purchase the Kindle version

Barnes@Nobles (Paperback and Nook) – Google Play – Kobo – iBooks app on Apple devices.


Join the mailing list for updates and future events. No obligations, total privacy, unsubscribe if you want.

You’ll receive a link to download a free pdf of The Explananation and a free pdf of Answering the Big Questions in Life.


Was "Mineral Resources, the Only Reason We Humans can Work with Earth" worthwhile for you?

If so, please help me out:

- Add your comments below, join in the conversation.

- Click now and like The Explanation with Sam Kneller on Facebook

- Click and signup for future blog post notifications (you get a Free book as well)

- Share and tell your friends using the Google+, Facebook, Twitter, Pinterest and email icons above.

Much appreciated

The Explanation with Sam Kneller


The post Mineral Resources, the Only Reason We Humans can Work with Earth appeared first on The Explanation with Sam Kneller.

 •  0 comments  •  flag
Share on Twitter
Published on May 17, 2016 06:00
No comments have been added yet.