Workmen in Egypt inadvertently unearthed the approximately 2,000-year-old black granite sealed sarcophagus this month during the construction of an apartment building in the historic Mediterranean port city of Alexandria.
The 30-ton coffin is the largest yet found in Alexandria, prompting a swirl of theories in local and international media that it may be the resting place of the ancient Greek ruler who in 331 BC founded the city that still bears his name.
Egyptian archaeologists on Thursday dashed local hopes that a newly discovered ancient sarcophagus might contain the remains of Alexander the Great, finding instead the mummies of what appeared to be a family of three.
But days later, an online petition with the support of thousands of people across the globe is urging the Egyptian government to let them drink the strange red water found in the sarcophagus, Egypt Independent reported.
According to report published by the news website, archaeologists found three skeletons and a red liquid speculated to be sewage water that leaked into the coffin, causing the mummies to decompose according to an Egyptian Ministry of Antiquities report.
But people still believe it the sarcophagus might still be supernatural, prompting a twitter user to launch this petition which quickly went viral.
“We need to drink the red liquid from the cursed dark sarcophagus in the form of some sort of carbonated energy drink so we can assume its powers and finally die,” the petition says.
Its goal of 25,000 signatures has successfully reached 17,597 in just three days from launch.
Here are the top contenders to succeed Pope Francis, whose death the Vatican announced on Monday
World mourns passing of Pope Francis, the first Latin American leader of the Roman Catholic Church
Francis dies at age 88 after illness, will go down in history as radical pontiff
Conclave to elect a new pope starts in the Vatican's Sistine Chapel between 15 and 20 days after death
During his reign as pope, Jorge Mario Bergoglio clashed with conservatives who were unhappy with his informal style
Born Jorge Mario Bergoglio, he was elected pope in March 2013; had recently survived serious bout of double pneumonia