My love of salt is no secret (as anyone who has read some of my food lists will know) so it seems a fitting subject for a list of fascinating facts (another thing I love). I have tried to restrict the list to facts that are less likely to be well known – but in some cases the facts are quite common. If you have any other facts to add to this list, be sure to do so in the comments.
1. Right up to the 20th century, pound bars of salt (called amoleh) were the basic currency in Abyssinia (now called Ethiopia).
2. The amazing Salar de Uyuni (the world’s largest salt flat at 4,000 square miles) in Bolivia becomes mirrorlike when a thin layer of water lies on top. This reflectivity makes it a very useful tool in calibration scientific equipment from outer space. This amazing salt flat also contains half of the world’s supply of lithium. The salt flat is pictured above.
3. Salt is so essential to the body that if you drink too much water it can flush it out of your system and cause fatal Hyponatremia. This is what killed Jennifer Strange who entered a “Hold your wee for a wii” competition.
4. Consumption of too much salt can be deadly – you need to take about 1 gram of salt per kilogram of weight to die and this was used as a method of ritual suicide in China – especially amongst the nobility as salt was so expensive.
5. Good quality sea salt contains many essential minerals for the body. The best type of sea salt should be slightly wet from the sea it was taken from.
6. In the Middle Ages, salt was so expensive it was sometimes referred to as “white gold”. The medieval pavement of one of the transportation routes for Salt still exists in Germany where it links the inland city of Lüneburg to the German Baltic coast.
7. Black Salt is made in India by mixing salt water with harad seeds. The mixture is left to evaporate leaving behind black lumps of salt. When the salt is ground, the resulting powder is pink (as can be seen in the image above).
8. In Guerande, France, salt is still gathered in the same way as it was by the ancient celts, using baskets through which the sea water is strained. This makes the salt very expensive and highly sought after, especially the finest quality version called Fleur de Sel (flower of salt). This salt is sprinkled on food prior to serving – it is never used in cooking.
9. There is a very common misconception that Roman soldiers were paid in salt (hence the word Salary), but in fact they were paid in normal money. The connection with salt is possibly through the fact that the soldiers protected the salt roads leading to Rome (Via Salarium). Roman Soldiers were private employees – rather than state employees.
10. Before Biblical Judaism ceased to exist, salt was mixed with animal sacrifices. This originated from Moses in Leviticus 2:13 which states: “Whatsoever sacrifice thou offerest, thou shalt season it with salt, neither shalt thou take away the salt of the covenant of thy God from thy sacrifice. In all thy oblations thou shalt offer salt.” The salt was a symbol of wisdom and discretion.
11. After aviation fuel is purified, salt is mixed with it to remove all traces of water before it can be used.
12. Sodium Chloride (salt – pictured above) is formed when the unstable metal sodium reacts with chlorine gas. It is the only family of rocks regularly eaten by humans.
13. In the early 1800s salt was 4 times as expensive as beef on the frontier – it was essential in keeping people and livestock alive.
14. Only 6% of the salt used in the U.S. is used in food; another 17% is used for de-icing streets and highways in the winter months.
15. In the late 17th century, salt was the leading cargo carried from the Caribbean to North America (most tonnage). Salt Cod was the leading cargo carried from North America to the Caribbean. It was used to feed slaves on sugar plantations.















TEX (44):
The things you see on LV… A list on salt that will inevitably lead to a long, interminable debate of evolution vs. creationism!
I´m actually “new” to salt. My father has had heart problems (and a strict no-salt diet) for as long as I can remember so all our meals at home were cooked without any salt. Every time I went out to eat the taste of salt would seem overpowering to me because I just wasnt used to it. It´s only recently (last 5 years or so and I´m 28) that I´ve learned to appreciate the taste.
- Guerrero Negro in Mexico has the biggest production of salt in the world (seven million tons of salt per annum).
- Hutchinson salt mine in Kansas City claims is the safest place on earth for storing valuable stuff, I quote:
“650 feet of earth and solid stone is an incomparable ally. No tornado, wildfire, rainfall, explosion, blizzard, ice storm, hail storm, or civil unrest will threaten your items. Our roof can’t leak. Fire can’t jump from the building next door (there isn’t one).”
can we start our own forum right on this salt list? Cause I don’t know what to do ith my day now. I might have to…work.
Salt is arguably not the only rock regularly eaten by humans. Nahcolite, a rock mined in Colorado, is chemically identical to baking soda and is one of the sources for food-grade baking soda. (The most common source of baking soda is another rock, called trona, but it undergoes chemical processing before it can be eaten so it doesn’t count. If it did, we’d have to count iron ore as well, since iron smelting byproducts are used as a source of iron in enriched wheat flour.)
To see what are regarded by many as the most beautiful salt carvings on earth Google – Wieliczka – and click “images”.
ASTONISHING!!!
Everything you see is salt, the polished floors, the sculptures, even the chandeliers are salt crystals.
Ok regarding #14. If food and roads uses only 23% of the salt, what makes up the use of the other 77%?
I have often awoke (awakened?) in the middle of the night wondering if there were any fascinating facts about salt–And this morning I finally have my answer: NO,there’s not.Thank you so much for solving this for me.
iodinized guns..number 68 so who cares, guess I cannot witticize here yo
57. Mark: hahaha! True…even weirder is that we sound alike too. It’s hard on those calling in.
63. callie_: Maybe we should.
Funny fact that I read about salt: With true sea salt…when it’s ground up, the gasses it produces during this process has a smell a little like violets.
Sweet list. Salty too. I love lists about absorbing (get it!) yet boring stuff – like salt.
Here is my limerick about salt
There once was a man who loved salt
Who lived his long life without fault
His tongue was all briny
His *****was not tiny
Then he was jailed for *****ual assault.
Bravo!
Great list JF – Here in the RSA we were exporting approx. 400,000 t of salt prior to 1994 and it has dwindled down to approx. 37% over the years.
No 36 deeeziner I agree with you, I came off a bike on the tarmac and only suffered roasties – the antibiotics that the Doc. gave me worked ( but slowly ) and a pal told me to swim in the sea once a day, and I can voutch for that – the healing proses was unbelievable.
Thanks guys great list
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Can someone explain why salt used to be so expensive it was called white gold?
I mean, with pepper, i get it – very exotic, from a land far away etc, but salt? Surely you can just wander to the nearest seaside, boil up a few pans of seawater and sell it for groats aplenty?
No 73 whoopee read the intro and comments before you start nagging.
1. Right up to the 20th century, pound bars of salt (called amoleh) were the basic currency in Abyssinia (now called Ethiopia).
I can’t help but imagine some guy walking to the town market, salt bars in hand, when out of nowhere a heavy downpour strikes… and dissolves his fortune.
Hey there. Some of those facts were interesting – anybody got any more about the Dead Sea?
I don’t use salt (out of habit rather than as a rule), but I use Soy Sauce instead. I don’t know if it’s any better on the old ticker but they do say Chinese food is among the healthiest – don’t they?
61: GTT: – I find the same thing. It gets to the point where I can’t eat anything at music festivals and such as they pour salt all over everything. Makes me feel aweful.
Item #8: – I like the idea of traditional sea salt mining; if it weren’t for the fact that the Mediterranean is one of the most polluted seas (after the caspian sea) in the world. Where I live, the North Sea and Irish Sea are in no way any better. It’s-a-waste
All I gotta say is…
***** SALT!!!
Most of the potash that is mined is used for fertilizer. Salt is separated from the potash and used for table salt, water softening salt, livestock salt and road de-icing salt.
When i was little I craved salt so much that I used to break off chunks of salt from the cows salt blocks to eat. Also, my sister toured a potash mine and brought home a chunk of potash. I used to break off chunks of the salt and eat it.
#75 – DogBitez – amusing, I have never seen ‘Ethiopia’ and ‘rain’ associated together before
Interesting list – I’m a sea-salt convert thanks to Jamie. Even my kids appreciate the flavor and complain about the processed stuff. It’s not the same, much more complex flavour with the real kind.
Ooochan: I don’t eat noodles’n'sauce or any of those packaged instant entrees. I love salt and those products are just awful – too fake and too salty – real salt doesn’t taste like that. It enhances and spikes up the flavour of food, not meant to overpower it.
whoopee – what about all those places not near the sea? Also salt is necessary for life – directly and indirectly – salting and curing made life possible in winter eh? allowed travel? and prevented it..without salt we wouldn’t have been able to stay put, we’d still be following the herds.
#78 – littleboots – Glad to see you here again. I had no idea they used saly to feed cattle… Since salt would not usually be present in a bovine diet I presume it is included to make them eat more and gain weight? I can’t imagine it being useful for milk production… ?? Littleboots – can you help? There’s a line of salt here for you if you can.
77. antilight- ***** salt.
Hey that was funny. The guy in that video has a whole list of videos about him and as real as he seems…I have to wonder do you think he is faking it?
80. Mom424: I so agree with you. It’s like a salt lick in a box or bag instead of food. My kid likes it, but for me…yuck!
I have switched to sea salt but still have to put in way less than recommended. Otherwise, I can’t eat the food.
I will say this…I have to have salt on corn on the cob or mashed potatoes but I won’t put it on my homemade fries. Weird.
No one has answered where the other 72% of Salt is used for.
*this seems to be the only site I can access this a.m.*
I use only sea salt. I have found that sea salt has such a different, clean flavor that one uses less than half as much as other salt. I buy it at the Natural Foods store (that’s the name of the store, I’m not making a value judgment), and keep it in a sealed container. If I want to put salt on he table, I just put a little salt in a ramekin and people can take a pinch as they need.
Interesting list, J!
cyn/j
I tried the new address, and I can see everything but whenever I try to log in it redirects me here: http://forums.listverse.com:8001/forums2/index.php?sid=31f9c43883e66d7c9dbf55b9b3ba3d76 this looks like it has links but they aren’t clickable, it just keeps redirecting.
and when I try to type the new address after that, I’m not logged in anymore.
Sorry for the list disturbance
Here is my 2 cents about salt facts.
John F. Kennedy gave a speech in 1962 at the America’s Cup Races and said this:
“All of us have in our veins the exact same percentage of salt in our blood that exists in the ocean, and, therefore, we have salt in our blood, in our sweat, in our tears. We are tied to the ocean. And when we go back to the sea — whether it is to sail or to watch it — we are going back from whence we came. “
Ooops! 73%
#87 – Blogball – Very very interesting. So THAT was what TEX was talking about! I also believe that our descendents came from the sea.
If you could imagine your own family tree strouting from that very point – with all the halls of animals, plants and birds rising above it; and yourself standing at the very top of the human branch; you may realise that you are directly related to every creature and every-body.
The bird singing outside your window… is your cousin. (sixty-nine times 10 power 16 removed, on your mothers side).
#79 Lifeschool
It does indeed rain in Ethiopia.
“Ethiopia Climate: Average annual precipitation on the central plateau is roughly 48 inches. Average annual rainfall in the Ogaden, however is less than 4 inches. The western most region of Ethiopia receives an annual rainfall of nearly 80 inches.”
So let’s assume my imaginary and unfortunate fellow is from the central plateau or western most region!
“The amazing Salar de Uyuni (the world’s largest salt flat at 4,000 square miles) in Bolivia become mirrorlike. . . ”
“becomes”?
other than that, great list, some really interesting things, very few i already knew, and I’d love to go to that salt flat
heyn salt is cool
#78 – Littleboots – I managed to find document dated 1894 about why animals need salt, and may have something to do with milk purification.
http://query.nytimes.com/mem/archive-free/pdf?_r=1&res=9D04E4DB1630E033A25752C1A9639C94659ED7CF
87. Blogball
see my #44 – TEX
Not sure how accurate:
- chemical industry : 44.7 %
- road salt : 26.5 %
- miscellaneous industries (water softening, animal feeds) : 17.6 %
- food grade salt : 11.2 %.
Another fact:
Cows are the only known animals to manifest an “specific hunger” when they lack certain nutrients or minerals, and that is for salt.
TEX, I should have mentioned that your comment triggered my memory to that Kennedy speech.
I had to look up the exact quote of course. I forgot it was at the America’s Cup Race, which makes sense why he reference it.
Thanks
Blogball -
I love the quote, couldn’t have found a more appropriate one myself.
Some people don’t seem to realize that all land creatures have strong ties to the sea.
Even our ashes will end up back there eventually.
Another fact:
Salt is awesome.
Thanks for the link lifeschool. I was always pretty sure that providing salt for cows helped somehow with the milk production since that was the main reason we had cows. However I have a friend who provides a salt block for the deer, they love it, and long after the block is gone, they still come back and lick the ground where it was.
I still get that familiar urge to break off a chunk of salt when I see blocks of it in the store…lol ur sure that’s a line of salt eh?
Phycosurfer 62.
Hutchinson salt mine is not in Kansas City. It is in Hutchinson, Ks. about 200 miles from Kansas City.
I have fixed the forums (I think!) So try them out again.
At industrial level, salt (NaCl) is used to produce chlorine gas (Cl2), hydrochloric acid (HCl), sodium hdroxide (NaOH), using diferent chemical methods.
There is a place in Colombia called “the Salt Cathedral”, it’s a church built inside an old salt mine.
It’s a beautiful place, and yes, everybody licks the walls when nobody sees them… I did it
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Salt_Cathedral_of_Zipaquir%C3%A1
65. TEX –Thank you for doing the research that (I’m lazy)
provided us with a name to google. Stunning beauty.
82. Cybogen I was curious about Tourette’s guy too, when I saw his Youtubes a couple years ago..Following the links I arrived at the Tourette’s Syndrome website. They recognize his condition, but note that his exact diagnoses is not “typical” and is acutely affected by his alcoholism. It is also my understanding that he is now deceased, although I do not know the cause.
94. TEX-Again thank you for doing the research for us.
and as a side note to Littleboots and Lifeschool’s convo, I remember the salt licks in the horse pastures of my childhood. I was always intrigued by the worn trenches of an older salt block, well-used by the horses and occasional cow on our friends’ Washington farm. The grooves were deep and shiny and I thought that if I was tiny they would be the funnest slide.
An exhausted saltblock is a surreal sculpture of spikes and valleys.
87. Blogball…John F. Kennedy…”All of us have in our veins the exact same percentage of salt in our blood that exists in the ocean, and, therefore, we have salt in our blood, in our sweat, in our tears. We are tied to the ocean. And when we go back to the sea — whether it is to sail or to watch it — we are going back from whence we came. ”
****
I have felt a strong pull by the sea ever since I can remember. In fact, my first full-on memory, at about 18 mos., was at the seaside, the leading edge of the wave just tickling my toes, and looking up to see that the water went on forever, until the sky began, and knowing that this was where I belonged.
Now, I live at the ocean. I feel safe. I’ve spoken to all of my (now adult) children, and none of them can imagine living their lives out in a land locked place, that if the sea is not there, it isn’t for them.
I’ve known since I was 8 that we are saline creatures, and it made sense to me that the sea held such sway over me.
A week ago, in the water at our favorite beach, I saw a large Great White Shark, attracted by a couple of fishermen in skiffs. It circled them for a while, then dove down into the depths, and I thought, “Will this keep me from swimming in the water here? Will it stop me from kayaking?” and I answered, “No!” They are here for the Harbor Seals and Otters and Elephant Seals, not the swimmers, surfers, and kayakers.
Taste your tears, they are salty.
Taste your blood, it is salty.
Taste your sweat, it is salty.
Yes, we came from the sea…so very, very long ago, but we still carry it’s remnants with us always.
This is an interesting list. As we all know, salt has been worth more than human life at one point, and although that has changed, it is to be found in pretty much every household. Long live salt, you make life just a little bit easier!!!
Thank you for this list, I enjoyed reading about something that is hard to fight and argue over! =] Peace and Salt forever.
Salt will be the death of me!!
76. Lifeschool – soy sauce is LOADED with sodium.
But it’s yummy!
Great list…I didn’t know you could OD on salt. I looked it up and found that people do this to kids and kill them! How horrible!
107: Mabel – Thanks for the heads up. It says in the list that sodium is an unstable metal? Beats me – it don’t sound good… but yeah – tastes great.
104: segue – I enjoy your insightful stories. Nature is a wonder to behold.
I’ve collected a bunch of salt crystals that are various colors of red and pink http://www.flickr.com/photos/alishav/3259723368/in/set-72157611304245894/ The salt crystals grow in pools that look like blood. It’s actually extremely salty water full of red, salt-loving algae that sometimes the salt crystals pick up when they’re forming, making the Halite crystals pink to wine-red. To get the crystals collectors have to wade through the stinky, red water and break off sections of minerals using big breaker bars.
After I go there and standing the salt water, and breathe in the air in that area, I can’t add salt to my food for weeks. Just the thought of it makes me feel sick.
There’s also the superstition of throwing salt over your shoulder after spilling some to ward off the bad luck.
i’d kick salt’s ass
I carry a little bag of pop corn salt in my purse in case I unexpectedly go to a movie.I looks like coke. I’ve often pictured the scene where if I get pulled over for speeding and they (the police) see the baggie of salt in my purse what would happen.
Your name is Eugene and you have a purse? with popcorn salt in it? Cool.
comment #1 said it all
SALT was also a treaty or some ***** during the cold war. SALT 2 didnt work because Regan wouldn’t give up SDI. Personally I just think SALT 2 was too salty for the Soviets to handle
rushfan (113) I’m a chick. Or as bucslim says a “skirt”
this is the saltiest thing i’ve ever tasted!!
and i once ate a heaping bowl of salt
So a highly reactive volatile and explosive metal + a very poisonous, oxygen displacing gas = requirement for daily life.
Strange how either element alone would kill you dead, but you can’t live without them both.
Also of note is how pure water alone is a bad conductor and NaCl (salt) alone is not very conductive, but together you have a highly conductive solution. Great science fair project by the way.
118. Tom Wang : “…Also of note is how pure water alone is a bad conductor…”
Quite right, as a matter of fact you’d have a hard time getting any electricity at all through it.
Fact 9. WRONG! The Via Salaria did, as you say connect Rome (Roma) with Castrum Truentinum (Approximately, modern-day Civitanova Marche; which means New City of Marche – Marche is the province) approximately 115 miles north-east of Rome, on the Adriatic Se.
HOWEVER: Roman Legions were NOT “private employees – rather than state employees”
There are some 44 Legions recorded in Roman History. Of these, 39 were raised by emperors:
28 ‘Augustan’Legions: Augustus Caesar or his heirs.
3 by Nero
2 by Marcus Aurelius
2 by Septimius Severus
and one each by:
Domitian, Trajan, Galba and Octavian
The remaining 5 Legio were raised by:
Macer: a Legatus, or General & Tribune – Consul – of Africa, who rebelled against Nero (one of Nero’s was to combat that of Macer)
Gaius Vibius Pansa: another Tribune (Consul) in support of Pompey’s rebellion against Julius Caesar
and one each by:
Marcus Aemilius Lepidus – a Triumvir of the Republic prior to Juilius Caesar
- a fourth was raised by Marcus Antonius a Senator/statesman of the Republic – father of the better-known Marcus Antonius (Mark Antony) of Cleopatra-bonking fame.
The fith was raised, of course, by Pompey himself!
All were paid by the state – either the state iun power or by a rebellious Tribune, Senator wetc – who paid them from state coffers (often usurped funds).
Legio prior to Caesar were ALL raised by the Senate or by the ruling Triumvate which followed the rule of the Kings.
So they were PROFESSIONAL state-paid soldiers! It would be also noted that any young man recruited into a Legion signed up for a compulsory 16-year service. Many op[ted for second and third "tours" with one old soldier finally retiring at age 64 - in Germania!
Finally no less an authority than Pliny the Elder (who died after getting too close to the erupting Mt.Somma which buried Herculaneum and Pompeii - Vesuvius is amore modern name for the smaller volcanic cone which rises in Somma's 'cradle' [or grave] – and observing the eruption before attempting to sail into the cloud of ash to rescue survivors – which is what killed him).
Pliny himself, in his Natural Histories discussion of sea water – states quite candidly that, “In Rome. . .the soldier’s pay was originally salt and the word salary derives from it”
Finally – the Augustan Legions had the highest status of all the Legia due to their association with Aigustus Caesar, and through him to Julius.