For all you big anubis fans and or the four sons of Horus. Feel free to use!

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For all you big anubis fans and or the four sons of Horus. Feel free to use!
Solarballs OC: HORUS!
Nik Douglas/Penny Slinger - Mountain Ecstasy - A. & W. Visual Library - 1978
A set of four canopic jars was an important element of the burial in most periods of Ancient Egyptian history. Canopic jars were containers in which the separately mummified organs would be placed. The best known versions of these jars have lids in the shape of the heads of protective deities called the four Sons of Horus. The human-headed Imsety was the guardian of the liver; the baboon-headed Hapy looked after the lungs; the jackal-headed Duamutef was responsible for the stomach; and the falcon-headed Qebehsenuef cared for the intestines. Image by The Metropolitan Museum of Art. Lean more / Daha fazlası https://www.archaeologs.com/w/canopic-jar/
Duamutef: So oxygen went on a date with potassium, it went... OK. Qebehsenuef: I thought oxygen was dating magnesium, OMG. Panebtawy: Actually oxygen first asked nitrogen out, but nitrogen was all like NO. Imsety: I thought oxygen had that double bond with the hydrogen twins. Hapy: Looks like someone's a HO. Ihy: NaBrO. Horus: I'm done with all of you!
Looks like Horus needs chemistry lessons, if he wants to keep up with all the in-jokes! XD
The four sons of Horus, (right to left): Imsety, Hapy, Duamutef and Qebehsenuef, above a doorway in the tomb of Nefertari.
Duamutef and Qebehsenuef present linen to the deceased (who bears a certain resemblance to Benedict Cumberbatch) for his mummification. From a canopic chest at the Rijksmuseum van Oudheden, Leiden.