Photo from open sources
Australian photographer Pete James Inham claims not to especially believes in paranormal phenomena, however one of the shots, which he did recently during his trip to the United States, made him think about the supernatural and his attitude to the other world.
After spending a vacation in America, a forty-three-year-old Australian traveled to the Mojave Desert in southwestern Utah and hit a sandstorm. There he came across a sand whirlwind and photographed this amazing atmospheric phenomenon near. But the most amazing thing in the end it turned out that in this picture a huge human face peering out of a sand cloud.
Having looked at the received image at home, Ingem considered that the face shown in the photo is very reminiscent of ancient Egyptian pharaoh in nemes. In the picture you can clearly see the eyes, nose, ear, chin and royal headgear of the phantom.
Pharaoh’s ghost hit the photographer
The photographer says: “I accidentally ended up in Mojave in sandstorm, and was forced to stop the car when ahead a sand whirlwind appeared. I got out of the car and did about twenty snapshots. Strange, but all of them, except for this, turned out to be some kind of muddy and smeared, although I am a professional in my field. it surprising in itself, but what struck me most was that I I saw in a single clear image. From a little tornado to me looked a human face in a memes! For some reason, I immediately calculated that this is the phantom of the pharaoh. Still, all around the desert, sand … And, to In a word, there was one more incomprehensible detail. It took me to take a picture a sand cloud, as it disappeared without a trace in a couple of seconds. I generally skeptic by nature, but such an incident cannot but force anyone think of the supernatural. ”
A photo from open sources
When Pete uploaded this image to the World Wide Web, the image quickly spread across social networks. Some regulars of the Internet even considered that the image appeared on the photo not Pharaoh, but Jesus Christ. Others thought it was Sand Devil – a mythical creature that supposedly lives in deserts and builds intrigues to casual travelers. By the way, sand devils in America the tornadoes themselves are called, one of which was photographed Australian.
Skeptics suggest that this is a para-idol illusion, which implies the formation in human consciousness illusory images, the basis for which are details from real world. In the same way, for example, you can look at the clouds, and the outlines of some of them will certainly seem to you similar to human faces. True, they forget that the camera, unlike human consciousness, is impartial to such phenomena …
Pharaohs