Mike Curtiss (1
June 2013)
"The Worship of
Meteorites, Asteroids and satan"
Dear Friends,
With the
publication of this article in archeology magazine this week an
interesting 'pearl' tumbled out
to expose 'the Evil One' Perhaps, we're privy to more
information than satan wants exposed at this time. I must
point out that the venerable and knowledgable MJ Agee first
explored these ideas with me. Let's see if we can take
these thoughts and connect the dots.
Satan, islam,
the Kaba are one. Marilyn can show you scripturally why Rahab, a
planet destroyed between Jupiter
and Mars was once 'the Evil Ones' ancient home. She believe that
a fragment of Rahab, an asteroid is actually his throne
today.
Ancient Egyptians accessorized with meteorites
Researchers at The Open University (OU) and The University of
Manchester have found conclusive proof that Ancient Egyptians
used meteorites to make symbolic accessories.
The evidence comes from strings of iron beads which were
excavated in 1911 at the Gerzeh cemetery, a burial site
approximately 70km south of Cairo. Dating from 3350 to 3600BC,
thousands of years before Egypt's Iron Age, the bead analysed
was originally assumed to be from a meteorite owing to its
composition of nickel-rich iron. But this hypothesis was
challenged in the 1980s when academics proposed that much of the
early worldwide examples of iron use originally thought to be of
meteorite-origin were actually early smelting attempts.
Subsequently, the Gerzeh bead, still the earliest discovered use
of iron by the Egyptians, was loaned by the Manchester Museum to
the OU and the University of Manchester's School of Materials
for further testing. Researchers used a combination of the OU's
electron microscope and Manchester's X-Ray CT scanner to
demonstrate that the nickel-rich chemical composition of the
bead confirms its meteorite origins.
OU Project Officer Diane Johnson, who led the study, said: "This
research highlights the application of modern technology to
ancient materials not only to understand meteorites better but
also to help us understand what ancient cultures considered
these materials to be and the importance they placed upon them."
Meteorite iron had profound implications for the Ancient
Egyptians, both in their perception of the iron in the context
of its celestial origin and in early metallurgy attempts.
Co-author Dr Joyce Tyldesley, a Senior Lecturer in Egyptology at
The University of Manchester, said: "Today, we see iron first
and foremost as a practical, rather dull metal. To the ancient
Egyptians, however, it was a rare and beautiful material which,
as it fell from the sky, surely had some magical/religious
properties. They therefore used this remarkable metal to create
small objects of beauty and religious significance which were so
important to them that they chose to include them in their
graves."
Philip Withers, Professor of Materials Science at The University
of Manchester, added: "Meteorites have a unique microstructural
and chemical fingerprint because they cooled incredibly slowly
as they travelled through space. It was really interesting to
find that fingerprint turn up in Egyptian artefacts."
###
The paper, 'Analysis of a prehistoric Egyptian iron bead with
implications for the use and perception of meteorite iron in
ancient Egypt,' is published in the Meteoritics and Planetary
Science journal.