Paul Saladino· MD
the there are many b12 analogs in the soil that looked like b12 but have no b12 biological activity
The evidence is convergent. Multiple independent sources reach the same conclusion, the underlying mechanism is well-characterized, and even the field's most cautious voices treat it as worth doing.
the there are many b12 analogs in the soil that looked like b12 but have no b12 biological activity
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the amount of retained vitamin b12 from the manure rich soil was adequate to prevent vitamin b12 deficiency
the study that he cited was an anthropological of indigenous people who would get b12 from dirt because the vegetables were grown in human manure it's called night soil yeah so if you eat your own poop you can get b12 from the bacteria in your gut and then it can go on your stomach and get read I jest but short of that b12 in the soil is all analogs that don't really work in human cognition
so if you eat your own poop you can get b12 from the bacteria in your gut and then it can go on your stomach and get read I jested but short of that b12 in the soil is all analogs that don't really work in human cognition