StarTalk Radio - The Salt of the Earth (Part 2)
Episode Date: March 28, 2013Before you add some extra flavoring to your food, sample our show on the health effects of salt. Subscribe to SiriusXM Podcasts+ on Apple Podcasts to listen to new episodes ad-free and a whole week ea...rly.
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Welcome to StarTalk, your place in the universe where science and pop culture collide.
StarTalk begins right now.
Welcome back to StarTalk Radio. I'm your host, Neil deGrasse Tyson.
I'm an astrophysicist with the American Museum of Natural History in New York City.
I also serve as the director of the Hayden Planetarium.
My co-host this week is the one, the only, Eugene Merman.
Hello.
Hello, hello.
Hello.
As you know, we're continuing our discussion on the science of salt.
Yeah. Begun in the previous hour continuing our discussion on the science of salt. Yeah.
Begun in the previous hour.
So lucky you found a salt comedian.
It was tough in the Yellow Pages, you know.
I know a lot about salt.
Previously, in that previous hour, we discussed how salt has flavored human culture and human history.
We did.
Yeah.
We didn't phrase it that way, luckily, but yeah.
Yeah, luckily.
And in this show, I want to focus differently on salt and find out what role it plays in our human biology, just in life in general, not so much culture.
Although that culture discussion was, I mean, I learned a lot.
Yeah.
I didn't know all that stuff.
Yeah, yeah.
That's good.
I mean, I figured, but now I know for sure.
And so we can ask the general question, I figured, but now I know for sure.
And so we can ask the general question, you know, why do we love salt so much?
You know, many people just love salty snacks and they even prefer that over sweets.
Actually, some they combine them, right?
You have like the sweet covered salty pretzel.
Exactly.
Salt is the original heroin.
Is that right?
Not heroin as the female hero.
No heroin, the drug that makes you write great songs.
There you go.
And so you wonder, is there some biological reason for preferring salty snacks?
I mean, this is an important question.
Just to remind everyone, salt, table salt, sodium and chloride, each of them rather deadly on their own. What about salt?
Isn't there salt that's with iodine, iodinized?
Oh, sorry.
So what happens is iodine is an important nutrient in the body.
And back when we were trying to figure out how to keep the country healthy,
most of that happened just before but mostly after the Depression,
people found ways to link certain nutrients to different foods that
are common, right?
And so you can iodize salt and not have it affect the flavor in any fundamental way and
still get iodine into the body.
And vitamin D dissolves well in fat, in milk fat.
So you add vitamin D to the milk.
You don't put vitamin D in the salt, right?
So you divide it all up and we have vitamins coming at us from every direction we turn.
But salt, you know,
salt seems to be everywhere.
So here's what happens.
Once you eat salt,
your body breaks it down
into sodium and chloride ions.
And ions are like,
it's where there's a net charge
in the atom.
Yeah.
So that you can do
interesting things
when you have a net.
You could turn it into
like a party
inside your body.
Well, it makes it a little more reactive.
I mean, it's when you have iron floating around your body.
And so sodium ions are like really important for maintaining your blood pressure.
And this is this issue with salt and your blood pressure that we always hear about.
There's an intimate relation between the two.
So for example, if your blood pressure goes down, just take this as an example, blood pressure goes down, then hormones in your
body tell the kidneys to retain sodium. And when you retain sodium, that leads for you to retain
water, which increases the volume and the pressure of your blood, bringing the blood pressure back
up. Would you also be able to just eat a little salt? Would that have a similar effect or no?
Well, that's, so both of those work in the same way.
Right.
Because now you have the extra...
So instead of it retaining the sodium
and then forcing the increase in the water retention,
you get the sodium for free.
Right.
Right.
So blood pressure is just all about
having a perfect amount of salt.
In the end, yeah.
And running and doing a lot of squats.
And eating healthy, right?
Well, eating healthy but with some salt.
And sodium ions play a role in muscle contraction and the firing of your nerves.
That's your electrical system.
And in your electrical – I think of it as the electrical system.
Sure.
Of the body?
Of the body.
You have your plumbing.
That's your intestines.
You got your carpentry. And that's what, like. That's your, like, your intestines. Okay. You got your carpentry.
And that's what, like, your fingertips?
No, that's your bones.
Okay.
Okay.
Right?
You're plumbing your carpentry, and you got your electrical.
And you got your electrical.
Right, right, right.
And then the roof.
So, sodium ion, so they play a role there where it's important for controlling the pressure inside of your body's cells.
And what happens if the pressure gets too high or too low, the cell wall can just explode, and that would be bad.
Yes, it would be terrible if you had so little salt you exploded or so much salt you exploded.
Either one sounds bad.
And the chloride ions, those are great.
Those are used for digestion.
You know what the acid in your stomach is that digests it?
It's hydrochloric acid.
Is it really?
It's got to get the chlorine from somewhere.
So it can eat through a table?
It could at the right concentration, right.
And it's been a mystery over all the years.
Why doesn't the hydrochloric acid dissolve your own stomach line?
Yes.
That's something I would like to ask you right now.
I don't have an answer for that.
Oh.
Oh.
We're all walking time bombs with melting stomachs.
So let's check out our clip.
As we learned in the first hour, I had a long interview with Mark Kolansky, the author of Salt, A World History.
Not only all the role that salt played in cultures and wars and love and deities, but also just the health of salt, the health considerations.
And let's just pick up on that interview with Mark Kolansky, taken in my office at the Hayden
Planetarium.
Obviously, sweat is salty, tears are salty.
So when you are low on salt, your body tends to crave salt.
If you lack salt in your body, biologically, your body will have this need for salt, but you won't crave salt in
the same way that if you didn't have enough water, you would be thirsty, or if you didn't have enough
food, you would be hungry. I became aware of this by interviewing World War II veterans in the
Pacific who got very sick, very bad headaches, and just were feeling weak and on the verge of
collapse. And they went to doctors, and the doctors said, well, it's the verge of collapse. And they went to doctors and
the doctors said, well, it's a lack of salt. And they gave them salt tablets and then they were
better. And to a person, the people I talked to were absolutely amazed by this because they had
experienced no desire to eat salt. So this is a Kurlansky theory with no scientific backing
whatsoever. But, you know, we really like salt, and almost anybody left to their own devices
will eat much more salt than you need to survive. I think the reason for that is we have this built-in
desire for salt because our system doesn't tell us, it doesn't warn us of a shortage,
so it makes sure that we're just always getting enough. That's the Kralinsky theory.
That's the Kralinsky theory.
sure that we're just always getting enough.
That's the Kurlansky theory.
That's the Kurlansky theory.
So do you know a full-grown adult contains about 250 grams of salt, which would fill about three to four salt shakers, just in case you were wondering.
I did not.
I was both wondering and didn't know that offhand.
I know you were.
But I now can't wait to go and tell people that myself.
You are burning to know this.
And the only question about drinking seawater, you know why we can't drink seawater?
Why not?
Too much salt? Because the seawater
is four times saltier than your blood.
That's bad.
And so if you were thirsty and you decided to
drink seawater, your kidneys would
use up the water trying to flush out the extra
salt. So then it's actually just
counterproductive. You'd actually die
from thirst faster if you
drank seawater.
Crazy.
We're done with this segment.
When StarTalk returns, more about all the ways salt can season itself.
We'll be right back.
This is StarTalk Radio.
I'm Neil deGrasse Tyson here in studio with my co-host this week, Eugene Merman.
Eugene, thanks for joining me again.
You're very welcome.
And you tweet at Eugene Merman.
I do.
M-I-R-M-A-N.
Exactly.
And I follow you.
Yes, and I you.
You follow me too?
Of course.
Oh, I didn't know.
That's what I know about science.
So, yeah, because you don't have to.
That's not a prerequisite for being my co-host here, just so you know.
Yes, no, I understand.
I do it of my own free will.
I'd tweet at Neil Tyson if anybody's interested.
They're just cosmic brain droppings, actually.
So, topic for the show is salt and the flavor it adds to our lives.
Yes.
And in a previous segment, we learned why salt is important for our health.
Yeah.
In an interview that I had in my office with
Mark Kurlansky, author of Salt, A World History.
But the real question that plagues us all is how much salt is too much salt?
Yeah.
This is what, I don't know how much is.
Well, definitely a glass of seawater is too much because it has four times as we learned
the salt.
That's great to know.
I always wondered why you can't drink it. Somebody's paying good attention to what's going on here.
Oh, yeah. I'm taking notes. So let's check on the clip with Mark Kalansky. Find out how much salt
is too much salt. That's been a raging debate among nutritionists and doctors
and the people who just love their salty snacks. Let's check out, find out what he has to say.
At that basic cellular level, your body would not function
without sodium and chloride. So how much salt do we actually need? Can I talk to a doctor on this
one? I don't remember the exact amount, but we're talking about a very small amount. As I said,
if you eat red meat, you get all the salt you need. But I eat red meat and pretzels and popcorn
and all these other salty things. So I'm totally... You're way over.
You could just eat the pretzels and popcorn.
You don't need the meat.
The more difficult question is how much salt is too much.
Here's where you get into big debates.
Because it's not the same answer for everybody.
Our kidneys are designed to deal with excesses of sodium and chloride.
And if everything is working the way it should be,
you should be able to eat enormous excesses of salt without any consequence.
And many people can, but some people can't.
So your point is we should not think of too much salt as a general health problem.
It's only a health problem for which it's too much salt.
Yeah, you know, the
health community gets very angry with me about this because, you know, the problem with health
officialdom is that they want there to be sweeping rules so that they can catch everybody. And they
don't like it when people like me say that some people can eat excesses of salt with
impunity because then you know everybody will say oh I'm one of those people but some people can and
some people can't you get these comparisons for example when I get into this debate with health
people they start making comparisons to smoking it's not the same thing as smoking. Any amount of smoking is bad for you.
Any amount of salt isn't bad for you. A certain amount is bad for you. And how much that amount
is depends on the individual. Limits here. So the, the, the U S the food and drug administration
suggests an upper limit for salt intake of five, between five and six grams per day.
limit for salt intake of between five and six grams per day.
How much?
What's that the equivalent of?
And they want you to take in less if you're known to have high blood pressure or some other health issue.
So a gram is one thousandth of a kilogram.
Yes.
No, that so far.
But meaning like vaguely like when you sit on a table.
So we do it.
So watch.
So a kilogram is a little over two pounds, 2.2 pounds.
Just call it two pounds.
Sure.
So a thousandth of two pounds is a five hundredth of a pound.
And an ounce is a sixteenth of a pound.
So one gram is a thirtieth of an ounce approximately, just doing that off the top of my head.
So a thirtieth of an ounce.
The same amount a teenager needs to get high to enjoy a concert.
I guess.
I don't know.
I'm just guessing.
And so – but actual data from people's real food consumption tells us that the average American man consumes more than 10 grams of salt per day, almost twice as much as – And that's in their coffee alone.
That's right.
Well, so here's the problem.
So, of course, increased salt puts you at risk of high blood pressure and heart disease and stroke.
And some people are more salt sensitive than others and for reasons that aren't always well known, just the genetic spread of what people are in this world.
Is there a test to find out if you're one of the people who can eat unlimited salt without having no harm done to you?
Is that a test anyone gives somebody?
What's funny is some tests, you know that they don't work for you because you died from it.
Yes.
Yes.
I guess I'll eat a pound of salt later this evening.
And if I live, I know that I'm fine eating salt.
You are cool eating salt.
Now, here's an interesting study.
So last year in the New England Journal of Medicine, which you read every night before you go to sleep.
Yeah, I can't fall asleep without reading some horrifying medical information.
They reported that if people removed a half a teaspoon of salt from their diet, okay, so that would be like about three grams per day, that it would prevent nearly 100,000 heart attacks each year.
And that's, you know, what's weird is people freak out.
Do you remember the Alar scare with apples?
There was like might have been cancer from the Alar on apples and people stopped eating apples.
Yeah.
And the risk that you would have experienced from that was really low, but that there was any risk at all, people reacted.
And so here we have, we can prevent 100,000 heart attacks just by reducing it.
Right.
Well, I think if apples were as fun as salt, then it wouldn't have been treated like that.
But here's the problem.
It's hard to reduce that much salt from our diet because 80% of the salt we consume is
already in the food when we buy it.
Right.
And the food that, put up the list.
You know, who doesn't like potato chips?
I love potato chips.
Yeah, who doesn't like soups and cheeseburgers?
I'm reading from your same list.
And no, the thing is with potato chips,
I've tried the low salt potato chips.
It's like, why am I wasting my time?
I can't go there.
Well, then you have to add other spices to cover
for them being no salt.
Is that what that is with the barbecue flavor?
I mean, barbecue, I'm sure is very salty.
But just the vinegar flavor? Maybe. I mean, probably any I'm sure, is very salty. But just the vinegar flavor?
Maybe.
I mean, probably any chips.
Maybe chips is not the thing that you could use.
I'm just saying I can't, you know, when I eat potato chips, I can't think of, you know, this needs vinegar.
You know, it's just not a thought I ever have.
In fact, there's nothing I've ever eaten where I said this needs vinegar.
I don't know.
Vinegar makes the soup dumplings delicious.
Okay.
But, you know, pasta and there's a lot of salt and cheese and, of course, soups.
Yeah.
Pizza, you know.
So what you're saying is if you make food for yourself, you'll be fine.
And if you eat at a deli where you buy like pizza and chips, you have like a month left to live.
Yeah.
You know, delis should have like warning salts or, you know, salt.
I think that was a thing, wasn't it?
I think that there was talk of there being like a salt warning or limits on salt by the FDA, I believe.
In a way, given the previous hour that we discussed salt, delis are like the holdout from another era where you preserve the meats with salt and smoke and all these other ways.
preserve the meats with salt and smoke and all these other ways.
And so the deli is kind of – and particularly in the big cities, New York and L.A., there's this – you walk by a deli, you got to slow down and maybe step in there.
Right.
And get some salted cold cuts.
And try to see if you can't kill yourself with them.
And they go in for the kill with those huge sweet desserts.
Right. Because if the salt wasn't good enough to kill you,'t kill yourself with them. And they go in for the kill with those huge sweet desserts. Right.
Because if the salt wasn't good enough to kill you, the dessert will get you.
You know, in other cultures, there's not a habit of adding salt to the food. Though they have food in other cultures.
America's the last country left that still has food.
And we make it all salty to try to destroy ourselves.
But think of in China and other Asian cultures, you know, there's soy sauce.
It's in the sauces.
There's no salt shaker on the table typically in a Chinese restaurant.
That's big.
Yeah, but Chinese food's problem is not lack of salt.
It's deliciously salty.
And, you know, it's fun.
I was great to learn that in a jar – not a jar, a bottle of Worcestershire sauce, you know, the active ingredient in the flavor is an anchovy.
Oh, really?
It's a dissolved anchovy.
It sounds delicious.
No wonder I like it.
And so, you know, it's, it's, wonder why you don't like it?
No, I love it.
Yeah, yeah, it's great.
It's great.
And I love anchovies.
They're so salty.
Are they naturally salty?
It's probably a little salt added, huh?
Well, I think they are from salt water.
So you get some salt for free out of that.
But, but right.
Well, I think they are from salt water, so you get some salt for free out of that.
But, right.
And so it's a – when you take in the salt separately – so what you can do is you can say since so much salt is coming from my diet, I will remove salt shakers from my table.
Yeah. That would be a very good way to have some force on avoiding the heart attack that the studies show.
Right, right.
Just don't have a salt shaker.
But who adds like salt to their pizza?
Like who does that?
Right, yeah.
This pepperoni is not salty enough.
You got to do this.
And by the way, so of course,
modern salt we mentioned earlier has some additives.
Yeah.
There's the pouring.
I don't know what they use for that.
It's an ingredient that they put in so the salt will continue to pour.
Because salt loves water and it loves caking.
And so.
That's why some salt triggers are full of rice also.
Yes, exactly.
The rice absorbs that.
And that was the Morton salt motto.
When it rains, it pours.
Oh, yeah.
Is that clever?
Yes.
Now I understand.
Yeah, you didn't understand that your whole life.
Yeah, exactly.
Because I didn't grow up figuring out why salt was messed up in the 50s.
And so there are those additives.
And, of course, they add iodine to – it also prevents goiter.
Uh-huh.
Oh, good.
Wait.
I think we have to wrap up last.
Yeah, we'll wrap up now.
But we have another segment coming, more about salt, more of my interview with Mark Harlansky,
author of Salt, A World
History, and we'll be back in the
StarTalk studios. Will D. Rastaisen
here with Eugene Merman.
Welcome back to StarTalk Radio.
This is Will D. Rastaisen,
your astrophysicist host.
With me this week is Eugene Merman.
Eugene.
Hello, Neil.
And our tasty topic this week is on salt.
Yes.
And the science behind it.
Now, you're an expert on salt because you're one of the voices in Bob's Burgers.
Yes, which is a salt-based cartoon.
Yes.
Animated feature on Fox.
Yes.
And it's before or after The Simpsons and Family Guy?
How do I find it?
It's after The Simpsons and before Family Guy.
They luckily don't air three shows at once and space them out.
Simultaneously?
Yeah.
So it's 8.30 on Fox.
Eastern Pacific, right?
Yeah, yeah.
Central.
Central is 7.30. Exactly. No one cares about Mountain Time, right? Yeah, yeah. The central. Central is 730.
Exactly.
No one cares about mountain time, right?
No.
But they know.
When they hear me say this, they're like,
oh, he's skipping mountain time.
You know, more people live in the metropolitan
area of New York than in the entire mountain
time zone.
See?
Yeah, that's why.
That's why I don't even bring it up.
Unless my hand is forced.
So Bob's Burgers, that makes you an expert on salt.
Yes.
I cannot rely entirely on that.
I have my interview clips from Mark Kolansky who wrote Salt, A World History.
It's a wise choice to spread out the experts.
So, you know, as we know, we have a basic need for salt.
And interesting study, our researchers found that the biological hard wiring in our brain for salt. And interesting study, our researchers found that the biological hard
wiring in our brain for salt follows the same pathways and nerve cells as some addictive drugs.
Yes. It really is the original heroin. I think it actually, or MSG follows the same pathway.
Something where you got to come back and have it and need more of it and even more.
And you reach a new plateau of it and then you got to put more on it, right?
I mean.
Oh, just like an actual drug.
That's just what I'm saying.
You're like, this is not working anymore.
I need a whole bottle of salt and a bottle of whiskey.
And it's interesting.
We complain about salt consumption today, but it used to be much higher.
Right.
But that's because they had no other way.
Yeah, but people died at 41.
I know, I know.
Well, so I asked-
Because they were so salty.
I asked Mark Kalansky about this just to get some insights-
Good.
Into the decrease in our salt consumption.
Let's see what he tells us.
Data shows that salt consumption is down 50% per capita from a couple of hundred years
ago.
Is that entirely because we're not eating preserved foods in the way we once did?
We eat much less salt than we used to because we don't live on a diet of salted food.
For instance, in northern countries in the wintertime, almost everything you ate was salted,
and also salted much more salted than it is now.
So in prior centuries, people ate enormous, enormous quantities of salt.
And I'd love to know, there doesn't seem to be any way of researching this,
what the comparison is on blood pressure,
whether people in earlier times had higher blood pressure.
Don't know.
And with higher blood pressure, there would have been more strokes.
Yes.
And strokes would have been more strokes. And strokes would have been more severe.
And heart problems.
And you go to an old cemetery, half the cemetery, people died between 50 and 60 or earlier.
So it makes you wonder.
Yes, but that's also a reflection on our improved ability to treat diseases.
Not necessarily that we're healthier.
But you could ask the question, if we upped salt
consumption today, given what we know about excess salt, to the levels of 200 years ago,
that would be a fascinating experiment to at least do on paper, what consequences,
how many people would die, more people would die each year. That's got to be a doable
thought experiment. Yeah, if you upped people's salt, but then you had better treatment for high blood pressure and heart attacks and strokes, would it all level out?
The fact that we're even discussing this, I should tell you, means that we have brought on the fury of the American Medical Association, which doesn't seem to think that people should
be guinea pigs.
I don't know.
That's their hang up.
I do really like the idea of a salt town where 1,000 people's intake of salt goes sky high
and we see if they die or not over a period of decades.
It's funny that the guinea pig as a metaphor, it doesn't think people should be guinea pigs,
right?
Because they're people.
Right. We should maybe first give salt to guinea pig as a metaphor, it doesn't think people should be guinea pigs, right? Because they're people. Right.
We should maybe first give salt to guinea pigs.
Exactly.
See how their blood pressure is and then try it on kids.
Human children.
So I don't know if you knew that the United States is the largest producer and consumer of salt in the world.
We produce 40 million tons each year. I have a feeling that we are the largest producer and consumer of a lot of world. We produce 40 million tons each year.
I have a feeling that we are the largest producer and consumer of a lot of things.
It's true.
Even probably turmeric.
And that's a billion dot billion dollars worth of salt.
And guess what?
Only 8% of that is used for food.
What's the rest of it used for?
Well, half of it is used for de-icing roads.
Right.
How do you like that?
You've driven by these big salt repositories in municipal centers where they just back up the dump trucks and load up the salt.
And, of course, that's had a bad environmental impact.
The plants along the side of the road are sort of susceptible.
Salty.
Are too salty.
The industry claims 14,000 uses of salt.
Name 2,000.
I mean, I believe you, but just name just 2,000 of them.
So some people still put salt in the water to raise the boiling temperature
so you can cook foods a little faster.
That's a good one.
Also, I do this.
I put in a dash of salt while you're boiling vegetables,
and it keeps the color of your broccoli bright and green.
I did not know that.
Rather than that faded green you get in canned broccoli.
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
And you also use it.
I would do this.
It helps make ice cream freeze.
Yes.
The salt is not in the ice cream but in the surrounding bath.
Yeah.
And here's something you might not have known.
You use the salt because it melts the ice at the temperature of the ice.
And liquid at that temperature absorbs heat faster than solid chunks do in
contact with the ice cream canister. What do you think of that?
I think you're lying. No, I think that's neat.
More when StarTalk continues. I'll tell you how I make my ice cream.
On a StarTalk show devoted entirely to salt. We'll see you in a moment.
Welcome back to Star Talk.
I'm Elias Tyson here in studio with my host this week, Eugene Merman.
Hello.
And we are talking about salt and the way it flavors our lives. I was going through a list of the salt industry's claim of 14,000 uses of salt.
And you asked me to name 2,000 and I'll prepare to do that now.
Great.
Okay.
Other than, of course, removing rust and making soap go.
Well, okay.
I wanted to continue.
The ice cream thing is important because there's important thermodynamics that goes on in ice
cream.
Yeah.
If you have the ice cream batter, I mean the mixture in the canister,
and you start churning it,
if it's just simply ice that's around the canister,
edges of the ice touch the canister and the heat isn't pulled out of the mixture
very efficiently.
You can plunge your hand into a pile of ice.
It's cold, but you're okay with it.
But salty ice.
If you melt the ice with salt, you are not raising the temperature of the ice.
The ice becomes liquid at the same temperature it used to be as ice.
At 32 degrees?
Well, no, even colder.
It's just colder ice.
It'll melt the ice at 25 degrees.
You melt it.
Now you have water at 25 degrees, and water will suck that heat out like it's nobody's business.
Oh, wow.
That's why you'll freeze much faster in water than in any other bath you could put yourself in.
That's why it's terrible to fall into the ocean off a boat.
Off of the Titanic, yes.
That's just one boat.
But I bet any boat, even a small boat, it would be terrible.
Even small boats.
Yeah.
Well, in my interview with Mark Kurlansky, who wrote Salt,
A World History, he actually has recipes for food in his book. I had to ask him about it.
I said, where's he going with this? Let's find out. I think that recipes are great archival
material. And it kind of gets misunderstood. You know, this isn't a cookbook. I'm not saying that
if you cook this recipe, you'll have a great dish. Many of the recipes I don't even try.
I'm interested in the ingredients they use, often the way things are talked about. You can find a
lot of interesting things in old recipes. When I did my cod book, I almost put a disclaimer there, you know, don't try this at home,
folks. And when the book came out in Icelandic, I went to Reykjavik, and they did this big dinner
in my honor. And to my absolute horror, they prepared all these dishes that were recipes
from my cod book. What a horrendous meal that was. Serves me right, I guess.
What a horrendous meal that was. Serves me right, I guess.
Is there any recipe from your salt book that you have tested and you would recommend for the listener?
Oh, yeah. Some of the Chinese recipes, which I got from Chinese chefs in Sichuan province, are really good.
And there is a medieval Italian recipe for sardines with salt and oranges, which I make all the time. It's great.
I noticed that in Chinese restaurants, there's no salt shaker on the table.
So there's salt that's apparently infused into the condiments, I guess.
Well, for the Chinese way of thinking, and it's not a bad way of thinking, actually,
the chef decides what the food should taste like.
What a concept.
Yeah. Of course, then you get to the issue of what is the importance of individual choice,
which historically has not been prized thing in China.
So, you know, early in Earth's history, it's very likely that the oceans were much saltier than they are today because they hadn't had the chance
to have these long-sustained and long-earned salt deposits that then get land underneath the earth
and it locks them away. And all that salt used to be in the ocean. Oceans that then spread into the
lakes and the valleys and those dry up, the salt stays there, gets buried under however many layers
of- So the ocean was much, much saltier.
Much saltier.
It's likely that it was much saltier than it is now, perhaps twice as salty.
Could you have walked on it?
Could you walk across the salty, salty ocean?
And so essentially because all the salt would have been in the ocean.
You can do that experiment.
Take the salinity of the Dead Sea and you said you could sit in the water.
You could sit in it, yeah.
You can't walk.
Yeah, so double it.
Double the salt.
We'll see what comes of it.
Right.
So think about it.
Back then, that's when life formed.
So life back then would have been quite salt-loving in its day. And what we wonder is whether the Jupiter's moon Europa has a liquid ocean beneath a frozen
icy top that has been liquid for billions of years.
We're wondering if that's a salty lake.
With some of the same kind of life that existed here billions of years ago.
Possibly.
Possibly.
And so one day I want to go ice fishing on Europa and find out what's-
I'll take you.
I will fold all the stars and we will
fly there.
Find out if anything comes up and licks
the camera lens, because this is exactly
what the conditions
are that we've got
that spawned life
here on Earth.
When we come back in our
final segment, there's more on what role salt has played in our lives
and what salt might be in our future.
See you in a minute.
Welcome back to StarTalk Radio.
I'm your host, Neil deGrasse Tyson.
And I'm here with my co-host, Eugene Merman.
And we've been trying to discuss and figure out and probe how salt has flavored human history.
Yes.
I like that that's every back.
I'm trying to just, you know, just try to pun it out there.
So, you know, have you been to like Whole Foods lately?
You can go to like the salt section and you get salt in like 10 different colors.
Have you done this?
No, but I'm aware of that.
I'm aware of lots of different kinds of salt and colors and flavors and like smoked salt and stuff like that.
Truffle salt.
Salted salt.
Salted salt.
Truffle salt.
That's a thing.
I think I have it.
You got to preserve the salt somehow.
I think it's that flavor not to keep salt salty.
So, of course, not all of them are white.
Some are black, blue, red, green, yellow.
And, in fact, some dyes actually come from salt.
And when I spoke with Mark Kurlansky, he wrote, of course, Salt, A World History.
And we've been using clips of my interview with him for both of these hours.
I asked him about the colored salt because I see it in grocery stores.
And I wonder, you know, they make these sort of backhanded claims like the colored salt is healthier than the regular salt because you find all these colored salts in the healthy parts of healthy stores, right?
What do they claim it – like, it's like a magic?
Like, what do they claim that it does?
Like, healthy how?
Like, less?
I don't know.
I'm just saying.
Does Mark know?
I don't know if Mark knows.
Let's find out what Mark Herlansky says about other stuff that you find in salt, some of
which changes its color.
A sea salt holding tank is just a piece of seabed that's dammed off,
and whatever is in the bottom of that bed, sand, dirt, minerals, can get into the salt.
And then there's a process you can wash salt, because salt has lots of amazing properties.
And one of them is that it will only hold water to a certain point.
And so if you have enough of a density of salt, the water can go
through it without washing it away. So you can wash salt. And it used to be, until modern times,
a goal of salt producers to try to get all that stuff out and try to get it as white as possible.
The gray salt of Guérand in Brittany, which is now very fashionable and health people keep telling
you eat this because the gray is so good for you. It was considered a huge problem and the French
government tried to work with them to clean it up because the Spanish were outselling them because
they were able to get their salt whiter. But I go now to Whole Foods and there's a wall of salt and
it's a spectrum of salt colors, pink, blue, gray.
Yeah, all of these colored salt is history reversing itself. The red sea salt from Hawaii,
the Polynesians never ate it. And if you read James Cook's diaries...
The explorer James Cook.
The British explorer traveling in the Pacific found that Polynesians had this red sea salt. He tried to
eat it and he wrote, this stuff tastes terrible. But what he didn't understand is they weren't
eating it. They were using it in rituals. Do you know what made that one red? Clay.
There used to be all kinds of different salts in all kinds of different colors. Every color
is an impurity. Sodium chloride is white. And then they figured out, largely the Morton Company, how to make salt consistent,
both in crystallization and in color, and make all salt the same. And we had that for a half a
century. And then I guess everybody decided this was boring. And now people, they want to have
salt that's different colors. And, you know, a lot of this stuff was the rejects of early industry.
So when in doubt, just sell it at a Whole Foods nature place and people just buy it up.
Yeah, absolutely. And, you know, it's fine. It's not bad for you, but I find the claim
that it's better for you to be a little bogus.
So all the colors are just like dirt and sediment left over in the salt.
I didn't know that there was a world of people trying to make salt more fun.
I didn't know that that was like a thing you could choose to do with your life.
Well, other things.
Did you know that because our body has very high salinity, salt water is a very good conductor of electricity, which makes you an awesome target for lightning?
That's why lightning loves people so much.
That's why.
And hates cats because they're just not as salty.
Lightning would much rather go through you than through the air.
And it should have the option to reach the ground and you provide six foot of nice conductive.
Salty.
Salty.
Body.
Body fluid.
It'll go sideways into you to get to the ground rather than go from the ground to the cloud as it, you know, lightning strikes backwards.
Yeah, it starts at the ground and then it flies up.
Exactly.
Out of my hands.
So in a way, you can shoot lightning as a person.
You just do it once and then you probably burn.
And plus, you know, there's all these sort of wet invertebrates that don't like salt, like slugs.
Have you ever put salt on a slug?
I have not.
I haven't.
And I also don't know what it does.
But when we were talking.
I don't see how that's possible.
Well, I don't see how.
You're a comedian.
How could you have never done this?
Well, I think as funny as the amount that you think it would be more reasonable that I had put salt on a slug.
Because I don't know.
I mean, I don't know where you get a slug.
It's not like I grew up in a sluggy.
I didn't grow up in a forest raised by wolves and slugs. What happens when you put salt on a slug. Like, it's not like I grew up like in a sluggy, I didn't grow up in a forest raised by wolves
and slugs.
What happens when you put salt on a slug?
It doesn't like it.
Yeah, you kill the slug.
You kill it because what happens?
Well, it shrivels up.
It sucks out all the water from the slug.
You know, if you light it on fire, same thing.
I'm going to stop there.
I need a tweet of the week.
We're running.
That's the end of our hour here.
How about I got one.
How about oceans, lake beds, mines, grocery stores, blood, sweat and tears, exploding stars, sources of sodium and chloride when you need it.
That is my StarTalk tweet of the week.
You've been listening to StarTalk Radio, brought to you in part by the National
Science Foundation. Find us
on the web at startalkradio.net.
I tweet at Neil Tyson. Eugene
Merman tweets at Eugene Merman.
Thanks, Eugene, for another episode
of StarTalk Radio. As always,
keep looking up.