The Manna Machine Instant
They hypothesize the machine cultured a hardy form of chlorella algae to produce a nutritious "single-cell protein".
It remains a cult classic for those interested in alternative history and biblical mysteries, though physical copies are often rare and expensive on retailers like Amazon UK .
(1978) is a speculative non-fiction book by George Sassoon and Rodney Dale that proposes a technological explanation for the biblical "manna" that fed the Israelites. The Theory The manna machine
The book suggests a nuclear reactor powered the device and was likely housed within the Ark of the Covenant , explaining the Ark's dangerous "holy" power.
Sassoon and Dale, both engineers, treated the Zohar as an rather than a religious text. They hypothesize the machine cultured a hardy form
The authors argue that the "Ancient of Days" described in the Zohar (a Jewish Kabbalistic text) was actually a of extraterrestrial origin.
The book is a staple of the "ancient aliens" genre, following the style of Erich von Däniken. The Theory The book suggests a nuclear reactor
The book includes detailed technical illustrations and a publicity model designed by Martin Riches to show how such a machine could physically function. Critical Reception