Pure Fulvic Acid Minerals protect against radiation polution
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• Radioactive Reactions with Fulvic and Humic Substances
• According to Szaloy, radioactive elements react with humic substances and require only a brief time until
• equilibrium is reached.
• F.W. Pauli stated that the solubility, migration, and accumulation of uranium are influenced by humic
• and fulvic acids.
• Szalay, A. (1958).
• The significance of humus in the geochemical enrichment of uranium. Preceedings of the 2nd International
conference on the Peaceful Uses of Atomic energy, 2, 182-186. (London: Pergamon)
• The fuel discharged from the light water reactors is contaminated with substantialamounts of plutonium and uranium.
These ions react with humic compounds at a much more rapid rate than do copper, nickel, lead, or cadmium ions.117
• Pillai and Mathew agreed that it would not be unrealistic to presume that the geochemical behavior of plutonium and
uranium is influenced by humic substances. They reported the presence of plutonium in purified organic material
extracted from coastal sediments and indicated the possibility of the accumulation of plutonium on organic surfaces
because the concentration of plutonium increased over time. As they confirmed that the organic matter solubilized the
plutonium, they discovered that the addition of organic matter inhibited the hydrolysis and precipitation of the added
plutonium. It was further reported that this scenario duplicates the action with uranium and other radioactive
elements.118
• Rashid stated that nuclear reactor wastes contain unused uranium, the basic fuel, and long-lived fission product
nuclides and actinides, including plutonium, strontium-90, zirconium-95, iodine-129, cesium-137 and cesium 135, all
in abundance. Activated metals such as cobalt-60, iron-59, and manganese-54 also are present in reactor waste. He
states that the basic reactions of these materials with humic substances are parallel to those of other transition and
trace metals.119
• “Radioactive elements have an affinity for humic and fulvic acids. They form organo-metal complexes of different
adsorptive stability and solubility. Uranium and plutonium are influenced by humic substances as are other polluting
metals, each being solubilized and absorbed, thereby annihilating the specific radioactivity.”120
• 117 Pauli, F.W. (1975). Heavy metal humates and their behavior against hydrogen sulfide. Soil Science, 119, 98-105.
• 118 Pillai, K.C., & Mathew, E. (1976). Plutonium in the aquatic environment: Its behavior, distribution and
significance. In Transuranium nuclides in the environment (pp. 25-45). Proceeding of the Sumposium, International
Atomic Energy Agency, Vienna.
• 119 Rashid, M.A. (1985). Geochemistry of Marine Humic Substances. New York: Springer-Verlag.
• 120 W.R. Jackson PhD. (1993) Humic, Fulvic, and Microbal Balance: Organic Soil Conditioning (pp. 762-763).
From hours of research and from personal experience, I believe these are the best
minerals on the market. Not onlyis this a trace mineral product, but it is a fulve acid
product. As a fulvic acid product it cannot be equally compated with any other trace
mineral product on the market.