Around 3.5 litres of the "elixir of immortality" were found in the tomb in the city of Luoyang during excavations last October. It was initially thought that the liquid was liquor because it smelled like alcohol.
However, it was announced this week that, lab testing has revealed that the mysterious liquid is mainly comprised of potassium nitrate and alunite, which are the main ingredients of an immortality draught recorded in an ancient Taoist text.
According to Xinhua, the magical elixir was found in a tomb belonging to a noble family from the Western Han Dynasty that dates back to between 202 BC to 8 AD. The family clearly placed a very high value on the elixir as they deemed it worthy of sharing their final resting place.
Potions that promised immortality were something of an obsession in ancient Chinese history, the most famous example being court sorcerer Xu Fu's two voyages in search of the elixir during the Qin Dynasty, however this is the first time that a sample of such liquid has been discovered intact.

The ancient tomb covers over 200 square meters and, as well as the elixir, its excavators also unearthed jadeware, bronze artifacts and painted clay pots.




Reader Comments
Apparently, the elixer of immortality wasn't doing its supposed thing if it ended up in a tomb, eh what?
R.C.
*Is that Chopin?
RC
Uhh...wait a minute here. This stuff was supposed to make them immortal, so it was so highly prized that they put it in the tombs with deceased family members. Maybe they got it too late and were thinking it might bring dad back to life or something like that.