Billy Meier on ....
Feb 3, 1987
Feb 3, 1987
There are several reasons for the sudden deaths of many archaeologists and grave robbers while excavating or robbing the ancient Pharaohs’ tombs or else died within hours, days, or a few week.
The two most important ones are the following:
To protect the tombs against grave robbery, one method was that spines, which were thinner than hair and which were of the fruit of the Indian cactus, were soaked with deadly poisons, were dried, and were then painted onto bandages, with which the dead were wrapped.
The deadly poisons of the kind that was used are extremely stable and are still effective even after thousands of years.
Now, if grave robbers and archaeologists, etc. touched the bandages of the mummified bodies, then the poisonous spines penetrated into their hands, without this being noticed, because the spines of the cactus figs are much thinner than human hair.
In addition, the insidious poison was of a different kind, so it was also different in the temporal effect, which could occur in either hours or days or only after two or three weeks.
Another very popular and lethal means was the use of fungal spores that were cultivated specifically for the purpose of the quick killing of the grave robbers, so the bandages of the deceased as well as the Sarcophagi and the tomb walls, etc. were infected with these.
Now, when grave robbers – or later archaeologists – entered the tombs, as a result of their entering and also by the work taken up, they whirled up dust that was loaded with deadly fungal spores.
The extremely toxic dust was inhaled by the grave robbers and archaeologists, and this quickly led to death, which came about very quickly or over days or over several weeks.
These are the two main ways, by which the tombs and the treasures of the Pharaohs were protected against grave robbers.
CR 214
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