no each nutrient had a different table therefore....
arsenic is a man made poison yet its in most of those bottles an not naturaly there. 1 example
for the last time GO buys from afaik and so does denali
its funny how 6 months ago when cann was saying what i say now and i replied to him the same way you reply to me. you were one of the people that jumped on me for saying the same thing you are now saying. which is the opposite.
cann proved me wrong about ancient forest. you sided with him and now say the opposite. he showed plenty of proof in the rols thread so go find it.
since you are so determined to be right even though you are wrong.
im done
Why don't you e-mail the Oregon Dept. of Agriculture and ask them yourself?
What is this "AFAIK" that you speak of?? I jumped on you for saying what, when? Which is the opposite of what I am saying now? Huh? Care to link me to the thread/posts in question? Otherwise I am sorry to say I don't recall such an instance... I am not going to go find anything, I have shit to do besides read through 100s upon 100s of posts.
The primary point I am trying to make is that you totally don't know what you're looking at on those web pages. To be honest with you, I am trying to make this clear for the benefit of anybody else who doesn't understand because this misinformation is not helpful to anyone. Obviously you're a lost cause and unfortunately you want to hang on to your misconceptions as tightly as possible... (or am I talking about myself?)
Another thing you fail to understand... Arsenic
is not man made.
Arsenic is a naturally occurring element, a metalloid, found naturally in the Earth's crust just like other minerals.
Arsenic is naturally present in soil, food, and water.
Arsenic makes up about 1.5
ppm (0.00015%) of the
Earth's crust, making it the 53rd most abundant element. Soil contains 110 ppm of arsenic.
Seawater has only 1.6
ppb arsenic.[SUP]
[22][/SUP]
Some heavy metals are required as trace elements, most commonly copper, zinc, cobalt, nickel etc. but also others depending on the organism... potentially including arsenic. Of course, too much of any of these is also toxic to most organisms. Arsenic interferes with the Kreb's cycle, competing with phosphorous and inhibiting pyruvate dehydrogenase, thereby halting the production of ATP. However, there is organic arsenic and inorganic arsenic. The toxic forms of arsenic are the inorganic forms, while organic arsenic is relatively harmless. This is in contrast to mercury, in the case of which all forms possess some toxicity but the organic form (methylmercury) is the most toxic. When you see a listing of a heavy metal content (e.g. for arsenic), that is the maximum total content without distinguishing between organic/inorganic forms.
I sort of have a thing for chemistry and biology, of the real factual sort. If that makes me a know it all so be it.
So for the benefit of anybody else who actually would like to use the Oregon Dept. of Agriculture product registration database for a practical purpose, understand what they are looking it, and obtain accurate information from it, please follow along. What the database will tell you mainly is the maximum content of 5 heavy metals (in ppm), the guaranteed analysis, and what if any ingredients are considered "Non Plant Food Ingredients" (such as humic acid and kelp).
They all start off and look something like this, here is a good example:
Product Name: 7-28-4 Enhance +plus foliar fertilizer
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