Thanks Rowena.  I am still having trouble figuring out what 'stuff' is left 
behind from evaporated water.  I have plenty of ocean water  nearby and now I 
am wondering if I evaporated a pot of it, what would I be left with?  Magnesium 
oil?  Don't think so.  Faith G.

  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Rowena 
  To: silver-list@eskimo.com 
  Sent: Friday, May 16, 2008 12:40 PM
  Subject: Re: CS>Benefits of Magnesium Oil


  That's right, Faith.  Most of the water evaporates and leaves behind - stuff.
  This water plus stuff is condensed now.
  There is some water, and as much of the stuff as it will hold, rather than a 
diluted form with stuff plus a lot of water.
  If they evaporated any more water, the stuff would, I suppose, precipitate 
and you would have powder or whatever.
  But if they stop evaporating it when it is a saturated solution, you get as 
much of the stuff as possible in as little of the water as is necessary to keep 
it in solution.
  It is only when it has had water evaporated off that it is condensed.
  Like your tin of condensed milk, a lot of the water has dissapeared into thin 
air and you are left with - stuff, thick runny stuff.

  Rowena
    ----- Original 

    I looked at the Global Light Network's article on magnesium oil,  and they 
say that their product is ocean water in its most condensed form.  There is no 
oil in it at all.  The water is so condensed that an oil-like viscuosity is the 
result.

    I don't understand this.  I thought that 'condensed' water, ocean or 
otherwise, would evaporate.  Faith G.