|
Over
36 years ago, the founder of Trace Minerals Research read a series of
newspaper articles written by Dr. George W. Crane announcing such headlines
as “The Ocean’s 44 Antidotes for Deficiency Ailments” and “Trace Chemicals
Essential to the Body.”
The “Power” of Trace
Minerals...
These
articles piqued his interest with information about the amazing results
people were receiving from drinking a little bit of sea water each day. This
led him to research the Great Salt Lake, an inland sea located near his
home. He found that the Great Salt Lake not only had the same minerals and
balance discussed by George Crane, but that it was 6 to 10 times more
concentrated than regular sea water without the pollution. He knew there was
a need for these minerals and thus, the idea for a company was born. Yet it
was not until he had tried the minerals himself and had seen results from
other people that the company was established with initial product sales.
Science was
slow to provide answers as to why the minerals from this desert sea caused
such dramatic and varied results in people, but he knew from his growing
stack of testimonials that the company’s first product, Inland Sea Water,
was effective. He and his wife founded Trace Minerals Research in 1968 and
started selling pure Great Salt Lake water to the public. A short time later
they discovered how to use nature’s own processes to remove the sodium,
thereby creating low-sodium, Concentrace® Trace Mineral Drops.
In 1999,
three successful sales representatives of Trace Minerals Research partnered
together to purchase TMR. Since the transfer of ownership, TMR has had
double-digit growth every year and has added more than 35 products to its
product line, including the addition of the Liquimins™ line of cutting edge
liquid supplements. Because of TMR’s current research and commitment to
producing the highest quality products on the market, it plans to continue
its unparalleled growth into the future.
Trace
Minerals Research was founded on the principle that nutritional supplements
should get results and that if a customer does not actually feel an
improvement in their health, they should not have to pay for it. This
principle is still the foundation of the TMR philosophy.
Not a
single bottle of product leaves our manufacturing facility unless we can
confidently back it up with the guarantee of “Feel the Difference or Your
Money Back.” This guarantee is made possible today from the minerals found
in the Great Salt Lake. The Great Salt Lake contains a rich abundance of
minerals and trace minerals that have been balanced by nature and that are
highly assimilable because of their ionic form. These body-balanced, full
spectrum minerals are the very minerals Americans need to curb mineral
deficiency. TMR sent most of their products into development because of the
spectacular results many people were already discovering from low sodium
ConcenTrace® and Trace Mineral Drops. The company then combined their ionic
trace mineral complex to formulas with vitamins, herbs, enzymes and other
nutrients to enhance the specific benefits people were reporting.
TMR now has
a complete line of highly effective nutritional supplements each backed by
our guarantee of “Feel the Difference or Your Money Back”. These products
are also backed by research and we are continually researching new
information on our existing and new products.
As the Soils Become Depleted
of Minerals,
the Seas Become Enriched with Minerals.
Our
philosophy at Trace Minerals Research has always been that the Earth was
created with the perfect balance of all the nutrients that humans need to be
healthy and happy. The only problem is that over the years humans have
become victims of the water cycle. Dr. U. Aswathanarayana states, “Soil
erosion leads to the depletion of essential nutrient elements in crops grown
in depleted soils. When people consume a diet derived from such crops, the
intake of essential elements becomes inadequate. This leads to the
impairment of the relevant physiological functions, and causes disease.”
1*For millions of years, every sprouting seed and towering tree has
dissolved minerals to ionic form and raised them from the depths of the soil
where they could easily be washed away by water. To add to this problem,
aggressive farming has further depleted the soils. Furthermore, many
fertilizers and pesticides bind trace minerals in the soil so that fewer
minerals are absorbed by fruits and vegetables. The importance of minerals
in the soil and their effects on human health are not new concepts. Dr.
Alexis Carrel, Winner of the Nobel Prize in Medicine in 1912, states, “Soil
is the basis of all human life and our only hope for a healthy world.... All
of life will be either healthy or unhealthy according to the fertility of
the soil. Minerals in the soil control the metabolism of cells in plant,
animal and man....* Diseases are created chiefly by destroying the harmony
reigning among mineral substances present in infinitesimal amounts in air,
water and food, but most importantly in the soil.” * Even the AMA
recognizes the importance of minerals in our diet. “Variations in the
distribution of certain minerals in the environment are known to have an
effect on health.” 2
The lack of
minerals in our soil is evidenced through the need for constant
fertilization. Plants need nitrogen, hydrogen, oxygen, chlorine, carbon,
boron, sulfur, potassium, magnesium, phosphorous, iron, zinc, copper
manganese, and molybdenum, some of which are commonly replaced through
fertilizers to provide maximum crops through minimum investment. However,
humans are known to additionally need calcium, sodium, fluorine, bromine,
chromium, iodine, silicon, selenium, beryllium, lithium, cobalt, vanadium
and nickel, which would not necessarily be replaced through fertilization
for plants. 3*
This
continual cycle of soil depletion and minor replacement of minerals through
fertilization in conjunction with a diet of processed foods has left many
Americans deficient in minerals and trace minerals. This does not need to be
the case. To discover where the minerals have disappeared, we need to follow
the water cycle. As water goes through the constant cycle from evaporation
to precipitation, minerals are transported through rivers and streams where
it is then collected in the seas thereby creating a natural equilibrium.
Today,
Trace Minerals Research harvests minerals and trace minerals from the Great
Salt Lake, a uniquely rich and pure desert sea. These minerals are the basis
for each of their unique products and help provide a strong foundation for
balanced supplementation.*
Trace Minerals: Natural
Balance, Perfect Solution
Balance is
important to all areas of our lives and nutrition, but it is particularly
crucial when it comes to minerals and trace minerals: There are 92 elements
found in nature and an additional 22 theoretical and/or observed elements.
In addition, there are hundreds of isotope of the elements, any one of which
may play an as yet undiscovered role in human health. . . It becomes
increasingly evident when studying the relationship of minerals to human
health that keeping the level of minerals in balance in every tissue, fluid,
cell and organ in the human body may be the key to maintaining human health.
4*
Keeping
minerals in proper balance throughout the body while providing all of them
in sufficient quantities needed for optimal health is complex. This is
further complicated when using a bullet approach based on the latest
research that finds specific deficiencies and then supplements the diet with
just that particular nutrient: The complexity of the mineral imbalance
problem is apparent. It is apparent that our understanding of the mechanisms
of mineral imbalances is fragmentary. New inter-relationships are constantly
being discovered. We are presently recognizing and correcting only a small
fraction of the mineral imbalance problems plaguing animals and man. 5*
Imbalanced
interactions cause many problems when we consistently consume single
processed or refined minerals that are out of proportion with the other
minerals and trace minerals. This is particularly evident when it comes to
the most commonly refined mineral that Americans take into their diet,
sodium chloride and it’s effects on hypertension: *
Clearly,
nutrients function interactively both in the body and in their impact on
blood pressure regulation. Whenever the consumption of a single nutrient is
significantly altered, an entirely new dietary pattern is created. Nutrients
occur in clusters in the diet and may therefore act synergistically to alter
physiologic variables such as blood pressure. 6
These
relationships can, however, have an equally profound benefit on human health
when minerals are consumed in proper ratios. Certain minerals and trace
minerals, when found in proper balance, can serve additional non-classical
roles such as acting as antioxidants. Minerals and trace minerals can also
help each other in the process of assimilation and add additional safety
buffers for minerals that have the potential of being toxic to human health.
4* However, interrelationships of minerals and trace minerals are not
nearly as evident when they are found in a dry or a non-soluble form.* For
instance, powdered copper and zinc could be mixed up in ratio of a billion
parts of copper to just one part of zinc. Additionally, other minerals and
trace minerals in powder form could be mixed up in similar ratios without
causing a reaction to occur, but if they made it into the blood stream in
those same ratios, the results would be devastating to the body.*
Within the
blood stream, lymphatic fluid, cells and extracellular fluid, minerals and
trace minerals can be found completely dissociated into solution , which can
also be called electrolyte or ionic form. 7 In this state, they all have
specific positive or negative electrical signatures that cause a dynamic
equilibrium to take place. The body can use minor changes in this
equilibrium to create proper osmotic pressure and move nutrients to the
areas that need them most and create electrical impulses that run the entire
nervous system. 7*
This same
equilibrium can also be found in the seas around the world where minerals
and trace minerals have collected and concentrated in liquid ionic form for
millions of years. It is astounding to realize that the dynamic equilibrium
that takes place with liquid ionic minerals and trace minerals has created
the same basic balance in sea water that is found in healthy blood plasma
and lymphatic fluid.*
As you can
tell, the dynamic equilibrium of minerals and trace minerals found in sea
water is incredibly complex and has worked itself out over millions of years
using natural forces which as of yet are not fully understood by
scientists.* Scientists, working in the laboratory have never been able to
create sea water from scratch and even if it were possible it would cost
thousands of dollars a bottle.
Utah’s
Great Salt Lake, where TraceMinerals Research harvests Low Sodium
ConcenTrace® Trace Mineral Drops, is the largest body of concentrated sea
water in the world and is particularly rich in certain minerals and trace
minerals like magnesium, selenium, lithium, and boron which are vitally
important to human health. “The Great Salt Lake [has] concentrated many of
the same minerals found in the sea through geothermal and evaporative
processes. These natural sources of the elements can provide a rich source
of minerals compatible to human physiological needs.” 4 Also, because of
it’s high concentration, the dynamic equilibrium has caused the Great Salt
Lake to be uniquely low in certain toxic, heavy metals: ... The total
soluble concentrations of heavy metals in the water are extremely low. The
heavy metals in the lake, along with clays, organic materials and
carbonates, are precipitating to the sediments and deep brines where
anaerobic conditions and sulfide formed by sulfate reducing bacteria
immobilize the metals. The lake thus avoids accumulation of heavy metals in
the lake waters and is non-toxic and self-cleansing.. The unique saline
condition of [the] Great Salt Lake determines the precipitation and
immobilization of heavy metals in the lake.” 8 *
Today,
Trace Minerals Research uses the naturally balanced, naturally occurring
minerals and trace minerals from Utah’s Great Salt Lake as the basis for all
of their products. These products have been developed to work with the body
and its natural balances to provide many nutrients that may be lacking in
modern diets.
Like Your Body, It Only Lights
Up
with “Ionic” Trace Minerals
Every
second of every day your body relies on ionic minerals and trace minerals to
conduct and generate billions of tiny electrical impulses. Without these
impulses, not a single muscle, including your heart, would be able to
function.* Your brain would not function and the cells would not be able to
use osmosis to balance water pressure and absorb nutrients.* In fact, “many
vital body processes depend on the movement of ions across cell membranes”
2* “Recent research indicates that minerals may play a significant role
against a variety of degenerative diseases and processes.* They may also
prevent and reduce injury from environmental pollutants and enhance the
ability to work and learn. They can also protect the body from the effects
of toxic minerals.” 9*
The “Power” of Electrolyte
Trace Minerals...
The form of
different minerals also plays a key role in how well they are transported
through the circulatory system and the aqueous micro-environment of the
cells. 9*
1.Aswathanarayana, U. Professor. Trace Substances Environment and Health.
Science Reviews, London, 1:1994, pp. 222-223.
2.American
Medical Association. The American Medical Association Encyclopedia of
Medicine. Ed.Charles B. Clayman. Random House:1989, P. 409.
3.Schauss,
A.G. Keynote lecture, Texas Conference on Nutrition and Behavior,
University of Texas at Austin, October 28, 1982; and Schauss, A G. Nutrition
and Behavior. Journal of Applied Nutrition, 1983; 35:30-43.
4.Schauss,
Alexander. Minerals and Human Health: The Rationale for Optimal and
Balanced Trace Element Levels. Life Sciences Press: 1995, pp. 1, 5.
5.Hoekstra,
W.G. Federation Proceedings. National Academy of Sciences:
Washington D.C. (Sept./ Oct., 1964).
6.Reusser,
M.E., McCarron, D.A. Nutrition Review, 1994: 52; 367-375.
7.American
Medical Association. The American Medical Associations Encyclopedia of
Medicine. Ed. Charles B. Clayman. Random House: 1989, pp. 396, 605,
752.
8.Utah
Geological and Mineral Survey. Bulletin II 6., University of Utah: 1980, p.
198.
9.Schauss,
Alex. Minerals and Human Health: The Rationale for Optimal and Balanced
Trace Element Levels. Life Sciences Press: 1995, pp. 1, 3.
10.American
Medical Association. The American Medical Associations Encyclopedia of
Medicine, Ed. Charles B. Clayman. Random House:1989, P. 605.
11.Rosenberg, I.H., Solomans, N.W. Absorption and Malabsorption of
Mineral Nutrients. Alan R. Liss: 1984, P. 2.
12.Nielson,
Mark T. Ions: The Body’s Electrical Energy Source. 1993, p. 3.
13.Watts,
David L. Nutrient Interrelationships: Minerals-Vitamins-Endoctrine.
Reprinted from journal of Orthomolecular Medicine. Vol. 5, Number 1. 1990
p. 1.
* These
statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration.
These products are not intended to diagnose, treat, prevent or cure disease.
|