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The names Bentonite and Montmorillonite are sometimes used interchangeably to refer to edible
Calcium Bentonite Clays belonging to the smectite family of clays.
These clays were formed from volcanic activity millions of years ago
and are principally volcanic ash. Many sodium-based clays are marketed
as edible Bentonite Clays but require mixing with an acid beverage,
like apple cider vinegar, to offset the high sodium content prior to
consumption. As our bodies cannot tolerate the ingestion of large
amounts of sodium, the amount of sodium-based clay that can be
consumed in a day is restricted to small dosages. There are no such
consumption requirements or restrictions placed on pure Calcium
Bentonite Clay. Sodium-based clays are more typically used for
industrial purposes, including: plaster; oil well drilling mud; cat
litter; matches; cement tiles; lubricating grease; paints; copy paper;
dynamite; shoe polish; concrete; cleaning agents; wall boards,
crayons; and bleaching agents.
Calcium-based clays are referred to as
“living clays” as they principally consist of minerals that contribute
to the production of enzymes in all living organisms. They are the
preferred clays to be ingested by humans, animals, and plants and for
incorporating into soil. Always check your product labels. We
recommend a pure, Calcium Bentonite Clay with a very fine mesh (325 is
best)
Healing clay may be a new concept to
some of us, but is has been used for thousands of years. Long before
recorded history, humans have used healing clays externally and
internally to cure illnesses, sustain life and promote general health.
Ancient tribes of the high Andes, central Africa and the Aborigines of
Australia used clay as a dietary staple, a supplement and for healing
purposes.
In the second century A.D., Galen, the
famous Greek philosopher and physician, was the first to record the
use of clay by sick or injured animals. He later recorded numerous
cases of the internal and external uses of clay in his treatise on
clay therapy. In ancient Arabia, Avicena, the “Prince of Doctors”,
taught hundreds of his students about clay therapy.
Dioscorides, a Greek who was
considered the engineer of medicine for the Roman Empire, attributed
“God-like Intelligence” to the properties exhibited by clay used for
therapeutic purposes.
The Essenes (authors of the dead Sea
Scrolls) used clay for the natural healing of a wide variety of
illnesses and injuries, and there are numerous Biblical references to
the healing powers of clay.
The many benefits of clay were
recognized by the Amargosians (who preceded the Aztecs) and the
natives of Mexico and South America. North American Indians used clay
for food, body purification, healing, in ceremonial events and for
trading with other tribes.
Early French cultures used clay for
nutrition and medicinal purposes and also as a trading medium. They
touted the clay’s healing effect on gum diseases, ulcers, rashes,
dysentery, hemorrhoids, infected wounds and bites.
The 19th century German
naturopath, Sebastian Kneipp, and fellow naturalist Adolph Just,
accorded clay therapy a prominent position in their arsenal of
holistic medicine due to the tremendous results they achieved using
it.
Early in the 20th century,
Julius Stump, a renowned Berlin Physician, successfully used clay
therapy to treat Asiatic cholera. A contemporary, Dr. Meyer Camberg,
used green clay to neutralize arsenic poisoning. During the 1st
World War, German physicians offered clay therapy as a solution to the
food poisoning, dysentery, diarrhea, and wound infection that was
rampant among troops on both sides, greatly reducing mortality rates.
During the First World
War, the Russian soldiers received 200 grams of clay along with their
rations and it was added to mustard in several French regiments, who
remained free of the dysentery which ravaged nearby regiments.
Modern man is also beginning to
appreciate the miraculous healing properties of Calcium Bentonite
Clay. Russian scientists used clay to protect their bodies from
radiation when working with nuclear material. Because it adsorbs
radiation so well, Bentonite Clay was the material chosen to dump into
the Chernobyl reactors after the nuclear meltdown there. Today,
osteopaths, and other health professionals that include alternative
medicine as a part of their practice, are increasingly recommending
Bentonite clay to their patients for detoxification and to address
other illnesses and injuries.
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