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The Alchemy Key.pdf - Veritas File System

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Appendix 3 King Solomon's Method<br />

<strong>The</strong> following method is an edited summary of an anonymous<br />

article entitled Simple Methods of Making Monatomic Gold. 1450 It has the<br />

following disclaimers:<br />

New information regarding monatomic elements has been made<br />

available to this forum and the world. This information comes from a<br />

scientist who wishes to remain anonymous. It is the wish of this scientist<br />

that this information be made freely available and that his anonymity be<br />

protected. His expertise is in the field of metallurgy and mining and he<br />

holds degrees in five different physical sciences. He has been working<br />

with the monatomic precious elements since 1980.<br />

<strong>The</strong> author of this post does not claim that all of this information<br />

is accurate or even that any of it is true. It may contain errors and be<br />

incomplete in places.<br />

Any unknown material should be subjected to a 98 element scan<br />

prior to conversion to m-state material for ingestion.<br />

King Solomon's Method<br />

King Solomon’s people swept up the white material present when<br />

a lake dries. <strong>The</strong>y did not dig because they only wanted the material on<br />

the surface. <strong>The</strong>y fired this material with sulfur, put silver on top of it and<br />

mixed in iron. Using this method and a reverberatory furnace, they<br />

poured 100,000 talents of gold.<br />

Both damp evaporated salts and water from the Dead Sea produce<br />

a quantity of precipitate. Reconstituted Dead Sea salt water is far more<br />

concentrated, produces a much greater amount of precipitate and requires<br />

much more lye (dilute NaOH) to bring it up to the desired pH level.<br />

<strong>The</strong> procedure for extracting monatomic elements from dry<br />

material such as sweepings from salt and alkali flats, rock powders, etc. is<br />

as follows:<br />

1. Grind the dry material to as fine a consistency as possible.<br />

2. Add lye to cover the dry material with a thin layer and stir in<br />

distilled water sufficient to cover both by approximately 50mm.<br />

3. Bring to boil outdoors where caustic fumes can escape. <strong>The</strong><br />

pH should be at or slightly above 12. Replace water as needed to<br />

maintain sufficient reactant volume.<br />

4. Maintain at boiling temperature for four hours, the longer the<br />

better.<br />

402

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