Normally, blood has completely disintegrated after 5 days at the latest. At the moment we have the phenomenon that there are no more blood cells after 1-2 days. The only thing that remains after samples have been left lying around for a long time are the synthetic and artificial structures.
In addition, you are already happy if not all or some of the blood cells in the blood sample are synthetic.
After two weeks, this blood looks different. It was lying on the microscope slide including cover glass. Net-like structures have formed everywhere.
The drying out process should also have been completed long ago.
Even two-week-old blood shows that no normal biological fungi are growing here. Normally they should have been there long ago.
Most of the pictures were taken at 100x magnification with an oil lens. Unfortunately my software is still on strike and I can't put exact nm data directly into the picture. But I think the pictures speak for themselves:
These round, clumped remains of erythrocytes can still be found in a blister. Similar to what we can sometimes find in fresh blood samples.
This picture looks as if a glass plate has been broken into individual pieces. However, it is nothing more than a blood sample without any additives under the microscope.
In contrast to this 2-week-old blood, here is the article from a blood count that was active for more than 7 weeks:
7-week-old blood - and complete cell structures are still visible
The date of the blood sampling was 17.01.2024. And here are the pictures from today - 02.03.2024.SAM’s Substack is a reader-supported publication. To receive new posts and support my work, consider becoming a free or paid subscriber.
For your help and support here on Substack you will also get access to my Future Targets, Extra Targets and the first blueprint for the LaserCube on my website.
I have set up a Telegram channel - where I post new images from darkfield microscopy. If you would like to browse through new pictures in between, you are welcome to register.
DARPA's internet of bodies, in development for decades, freely dosed in the Covid shots