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And thought your response was appropriate. Downright restrained, in fact. Though I did enjoy the "hand-waving woo-woo" bits.
:rofl:
The mummies with traces of cocaine, nicotine and hashish are very interesting. Especially since I spent most of the last 4 years in Egypt, where this was also a hot topic from time to time. Dr. Zawi Hawass writes a weekly column for the English-language Egyptian Gazette, which was always entertaining. Especially when he ranted about the "aliens-built-the-Pyramids" crowd.
As far as those contaminated mummies, anything I can say would be just speculation by an ignoramus. Though it wouldn't surprise me that ANYTHING stored in Cairo's Egyptian Museum was contaminated by...anything. I've heard that in the basements of that museum, some crates have sat unopened for over 75 years. You have to wonder what might be lurking in there!
Along with mummies sold for their alleged "medicinal" value, during the 19th century thousands of mummies were ground up for fertilizer and exported to Europe. I think this was another scheme by the then-ruler of Egypt, Muhammad Ali. His idea of foreign diplomacy was giving away huge chunks of Egypt's historical heritage. e.g., he gave away the famous pair of obelisks known as "Cleopatra's Needles" to Britain and the U.S.
Muhammad Ali also stripped the pink granite off of a Giza pyramid and used it to decorate a new arsenal in Alexandria. He introduced Egypt to such modern European notions as the military draft and the secret police. Though his last ruling descendant, King Farouk, is seen by many Westerners as the prototypical Arab pasha, Egyptians today usually refer to Muhammad Ali (correctly) as "that #$%^$ Albanian mercenary."
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