in the 14th and 15th century in europe there was apparently such a high demand for nitrates for use in gunpowder that so-called petermen would buy or steal urine-infused soil from latrines, stables, chicken coops, etc. In ancient Rome urine was so valuable that some emperors began charging for the right to collect it through a tax called the "vectigal urinae".
My favorite was the fact that there were actual laws that said it was
illegal to ever throw your urine away. You had to supply your chamber pot's contents to the government because the nitrates were so critical to the survival of the nation.
And let me point out that urea, the active component of urine, is actually NH
4+, and that is the body's primary way of eliminating nitrogen. The four major chemical components of proteins in the body are CHON (with occasional P and K and some other very minor elements, but those four make up about 90% of the human body by mass), and the body already eliminates CO
2 through respiration, and H
2O through perspiration, so the body needs urine to eliminate that last element, N.
N is the most critical element in the NPK trio of critical elements for fertilizers for plants - those plants need N for their proteins as much as humans do. N comes in the form of NH
3 ammonia. Ammonia in nature is given to those plants through the great old cycle of life, distilling NH
4+ Urea through bacterial decomposition.
Urine is the single most important fertilizer in the world. It contains well over 90% of the world's nitrogen supply, and nitrogen is the most critical fertilizer element. Your pee is the key to the cycle of life.
It also happens to be the basis of virtually all explosives. (Based upon nitrogen's incredible energy release upon returning to it's "natural" state of the triple-bonded N
2 form found in 78% of the atmosphere.)
In the 18th and 19th centuries, use of gunpowder from pee had so critically drained our strategic supply of pee, needed to put back into our farms so that we could continue eating, but instead used to just shoot each other as gunpowder, that we had to literally circle the world looking for more pee to steal to fuel the imperial conquests of the age. The empires ran on pee, and the fate of the world rested on how much pee any given empire could acquire.
A major, decisive blow came when England finally managed to wrest control of the guano mines (literally, they were mining the ancient, fossilized poop of millions of years of seabirds, and fighting
wars over the right to do so,) in South America from the Germans, thus sealing the fate of Germany.
It was only the
Haber-Bosch Process, invented just before the outbreak of World War 1 that ever broke this chain of events, by giving humanity the power to create artificial pee from large concentrations of electricity and a lot of air, water, and some methane.
The Germans lost World War I not because of any strategic or military failure, but simply because they starved to death. Against Fritz Haber's warnings, they used all their remaining pee, and all the artificial pee they could create from the Haber-Bosch process to make gunpowder for the war, rather than using it as fertilizer, and in the end, the people of Germany were down to boiling shoe leather for food before they rioted and forced the nation to surrender just so they could get something to eat.
Almost all of human history revolves around the chemistry of pee.
And people make jokes about how adding pee into the game is a bad idea... Ignorant fools.