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Book 10. (1 results) Tribesmen of Gor (Individual Quote)

The salt in the normal Tahari fresh water, incidentally, is not without its value, for, when drunk, it helps to some extent, though it is not in itself sufficient, to prevent salt loss in animals and men through sweating. - (Tribesmen of Gor, Chapter 15, Sentence #44)
Chapter # Sentence # Quote
15 44 The salt in the normal Tahari fresh water, incidentally, is not without its value, for, when drunk, it helps to some extent, though it is not in itself sufficient, to prevent salt loss in animals and men through sweating.

Book 10. (7 results) Tribesmen of Gor (Context Quote)

Chapter # Sentence # Quote
15 41 The same underground seepage which, in places, fills the brine pits, in other places, passing through salt-free strata, provides Klima with its fresh water.
15 42 It has a salty taste like much of the water of the Tahari but it is completely drinkable, not having been filtered through the salt accumulations.
15 43 It contains only the salt normal in Tahari drinking water.
15 44 The salt in the normal Tahari fresh water, incidentally, is not without its value, for, when drunk, it helps to some extent, though it is not in itself sufficient, to prevent salt loss in animals and men through sweating.
15 45 Salt, of course, like water, is essential to life.
15 46 Sweating is dangerous in the Tahari.
15 47 This has something to do with the normally graceful, almost languid movements of the nomads and animals of the area.
The same underground seepage which, in places, fills the brine pits, in other places, passing through salt-free strata, provides Klima with its fresh water. It has a salty taste like much of the water of the Tahari but it is completely drinkable, not having been filtered through the salt accumulations. It contains only the salt normal in Tahari drinking water. The salt in the normal Tahari fresh water, incidentally, is not without its value, for, when drunk, it helps to some extent, though it is not in itself sufficient, to prevent salt loss in animals and men through sweating. Salt, of course, like water, is essential to life. Sweating is dangerous in the Tahari. This has something to do with the normally graceful, almost languid movements of the nomads and animals of the area. - (Tribesmen of Gor, Chapter 15)