The Origins of Sacred Clay

Clay has been used for thousands of years, yet its extraordinary healing powers are just beginning to be understood.

Sacred Clay is pyrophyllite clay. The clay shimmers with electronic energy. The crystalline lattice structure of clay allows it to store energy and then re-emit it in a useful form as needed. Pyrophyllite clay is a powerful alchemical agent promoting the transformation and transmission of electromagnetic energy.

Pyrophyllite clay is a natural product, uncontaminated by man or his environment. Although there are many different types and classes of clays throughout the world, all of which provide great benefit to the health, there are a few characteristics about pyrophyllite that are different and may explain the exceptional results experienced when using the Sacred Clay in baths, poultices, body wraps and internally. The power of this clay to detoxify, nourish and rejuvenate the body is truly remarkable.

Most clays are formed from volcanic ash that has fallen from the atmosphere, weathered and collected as sediment. Over time the addition of plant and animal remains as well as other forms of organic and inorganic material have mixed in and decomposed to form these organic clays, (examples include such clays as bentonite, montmorillonite, pascalite, illite or French Green, and so forth).

Pyrophyllite clay, on the other hand, was formed underground, beginning as a boiling lava soup (boiling rock), and eventually cooling due to the interaction with underground aquifer water. The combination of immense underground pressures and steam from contact with the aquifer waters caused the molten rock to transform into this exceptional clay. The electromagnetic properties seem to have been retained to a greater extent compared to the lava ash clays. This enhanced electromagnetic quality may also be due to pyrophyllite’s rich electrolyte content, containing 5 electrolytes in rather significant quantities including calcium (Ca2+), magnesium (Mg2+), potassium (K+), sulfate (SO42-), and sodium (Na+), along with 3 more to a lesser degree including chloride (Cl-), phosphate (PO42-), and hydrogen carbonate (HCO3-).

Pyrophyllite clay is a very rare and unique type of amorphous silica clay (amorphous means “non-crystalline; having neither definite form nor apparent structure”, and stands in contrast to a quartz silica, for instance, that is bound into a highly structured form). Containing well over 65 minerals and trace minerals in a natural, well proportioned balance, pyrophyllite rich mineral content is further enhanced by numerous rare earths and monatomic elements.

Pyrophyllite clay is almost 60% silica – the prime mineral required for strengthening bone and rebuilding body tissues. Roughly 50% of this silica is amorphous while the other 10% is quartz, providing both plants and human a good balance of available silica resources to draw from.

Due to the fact that the clay was formed near the high energy Crater Lake focal point, pyrophyllite also possesses other extraordinary qualities uncommon to other clays. The clay’s rich silica content gathers and holds the Crater Lake energies like a crystal might hold a charge. Many with strong intuitive or clairvoyant abilities have commented about Sacred Clay‘s unusually powerful energy field. Kinesiology tests consistently indicate strong positive responses for the clay’s value in addressing a client’s need.

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