Was It a Mummy's Curse

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The mummy's curse might be real - but it's caused by a fungus
After the opening of King Tut's tomb a century ago, the public became enthralled with the idea that many of those who entered were stricken with a a "mummy's curse" and died. There might be a scientific explanation. Shuttered, isolated tombs could grow dangerous fungal molds, particularly Aspergillus flavus, that could harm people with weakened immune systems. Aspergillus also might have contributed to the deaths of ten conservationists who opened the tomb of Polish King Casimir IV Jagiellon in 1973...

Lord Carnarvon's death: the curse of aspergillosis?
In her Correspondence letter, Ann Cox argues against the theory that Lord Carnarvon, the patron of Howard Carter, died of aspergillosis. That he became infected with the disease after inhaling spores of the fungus aspergillus in the tomb of Tutankhamen is a hypothesis put forward to challenge the previously held belief that pneumonia was the cause of his demise. Cox dismisses any link between Carnarvon's ingress into the tomb and his untimely death, based on the long period of time between the two events...

The mummy's curse: historical cohort study
There was no significant association between exposure to the mummy's curse and survival and thus no evidence to support the existence of a mummy's curse...