For me it is the fact that our blood contains iron. I earlier used to believe the word stood for some ‘organic element’ since I couldn’t accept we had metal flowing through our supposed carbon-based bodies, till I realized that is where the taste and smell of blood comes from.
Your bones are made of calcium, which is also a metal. You’ve got a metal frame inside your body.
Hate to burst your bubble, but the calcium inside your bones is not in a metallic form but as calciumphosphate. So no metal frame but one made of a salt I guess.
The thing that started this conversation is hemoglobin, which is also not metallic but a protein. I don’t think anyone was confused and thought that there’s actually shiney silvery elemental metallic calcium in our body.
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Your bones are not dead rocks! They are living organs that happen to have a lot of sturdy calcium structures in them. They do a lot of other stuff besides hold your body up. They store minerals for all the other stuff your body needs minerals for; that’s why osteoporosis is even a possible failure mode. Your bone marrow produces white blood cells for your immune system, too.
The fact that calcium is a metal is the reason why bones can be detected in X-rays.
(I’m pulling this out of my ass and I’m too lazy to look it up to see if it’s actually true.)
It’s true!
Source: my ass too!