AZOMITE is a soil re-mineraliser
and animal feed supplement and is an excellent anti-caking agent.
AZOMITE has, on average assay, more
than 67 periodic table elements in it, along with some trace minerals
and rare earths. If compared with 'fertilisers' generally containing
a ratio of N/P/K, AZOMITE has perhaps
0.1 to 0.15% N in it. However, modern fertilisers don't have all the
unusual mineral elements in them.
AZOMITE isn't a rock dust.
AZOMITE is volcanic in origin, rather
than glacial.
It's a mineralised, compacted volcanic ash, a natural volcanic ash
(rhyolitic tuff breccia) sourced from Utah in the USA.
Chemically, AZOMITE is a hydrated
sodium calcium aluminosilicate (HSCAS) containing minerals and trace
elements.
AZOMITE is a unique silica clay that
is mined from deposits left by an ancient volcano eruption that was
ejected out of the side of a mountain and filled a nearby lake bed.
Today the geologic characteristic is as an outcropping known locally
as a hogback. Also, the deposit is very old, perhaps as much as 30 million
years, rather than from the last ice age of perhaps 10-13,000 years.
The clay content of the product is @ 5% average and probably ranges
+/- 2%."
Nontoxic, AZOMITE is not a chemical
fertiliser, but a natural element-rich clay provided by Mother Earth.
AZOMITE is not created in a laboratory
and its nontoxic composition cannot harm the environment.
AZOMITE has been subjected to rigorous
testing and has been approved for use in large-scale Organic Plant and
Livestock production in the United States of America.
AZOMITE is:
- Stable Product That Does Not Require Special Attention In Order
To Use It.
- Contains 67-70 Trace Elements; 19-20 Needed by Living Systems.
- Certified for Use in Organic Farming.
- Certified for Halal Food Production.
- Approved IN General Category by FDA as GRAS.
- Approved by AAFCO for Use in Animal Feeds.
- AZOMITE is the registered trademark
of a natural ore that is mined from an ancient volcanic deposit
that is found only in the Western USA (in Utah).
- It is sold in several countries, including in the USA, for both
plant and animal use as a free-flowing powder that is less than
200-mesh. The factory can also agglomerate the powder into pellets.
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