Colonial North America: Countway Library of Medicine

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Pages That Mention Tricalcium phosphate

Barton, Benjamin Smith, 1766-1815. Benjamin Barton Smith notebook on materia medica circa 1796-1798. B MS b52.1, Countway Library of Medicine.

(seq. 43)
Indexed

(seq. 43)

34

Materia Alimentaria

Calcareous Earths

confined the child to an animal diet but found the least quantity to increase the discharge. Gum Arabic was given the child seemed to fatten on that diet, in this case the Gum was evidently nutritious. Calcareous Earths. This may I think be ranked amongst the nutrentia phosphate of lime exists in many parts of the body, as in the bones &c, and many fish are found with shels in their stomach. Vegitables contain almost universally calcareous earths, it is even found in their acids. The utility of lime in agriculture is generally acknowledged, lime may also independent of its nutritious qualities act clinically in dissolving dead matter. Dr Darwin observes if oak bark be covered with lime in a few months it is reduced to a fine black mould which would otherwise require several years to produce this effect. Lime is further serviceable to plants by attracting the moisture of the atmosphere, it is certainly nutritious to some animals and to most vegitables, and from analogy we infer it is to man no mean nutriment, but in proof of this we have more than base analogy. Barron Hombolt informs us, Calcareous earth is eat by the people of South America as

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