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Iodine is found on Earth mainly as the highly water-soluble iodide I < sup >-</ sup >, which concentrates it in oceans and brine pools.
Like the other halogens, free iodine occurs mainly as a diatomic molecule I < sub > 2 </ sub >, and then only momentarily after being oxidized from iodide by an oxidant like free oxygen.
In the universe and on Earth, iodine's high atomic number makes it a relatively rare element.
However, its presence in ocean water has given it a role in biology.
It is the heaviest essential element utilized widely by life in biological functions ( only tungsten, employed in enzymes by a few species of bacteria, is heavier ).
Iodine's rarity in many soils, due to initial low abundance as a crust-element, and also leaching of soluble iodide by rainwater, has led to many deficiency problems in land animals and inland human populations.
Iodine deficiency affects about two billion people and is the leading preventable cause of intellectual disabilities.

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