1,000-year-old fossil of ‘Alien’ corpses displayed in Mexico’s Congress.

1,000-year-old fossil of ‘Alien’ corpses displayed in Mexico’s Congress.

by
Priyambda Samanta Ray

According to news reports, two corpses of supposed “non-human” aliens were showcased before the Mexico Congress by a UFO expert. The bodies, which are estimated to be 1,000 years old, were presented in glass cases during a special session.


The fossilized bodies, presented by journalist and Mexico’s best-known ufologist Jaime Maussan, were retrieved from Cusco in Peru.

"These specimens are not part of the evolution of our world. They were not recovered from a UFO scrap. They were found fossilized in a diatom moss mine," Maussan said, testifying under oath.

Diatom has an extraordinary characteristic. It dries up the body and prevents bacterial and fungal growth, satisfying all the conditions for preservation.

The two bodies — with only three fingers on each hand and elongated ET-style heads. X-rays show that one of the corpses has mysterious ‘’eggs’’ inside unveiled by Maussan.




The Autonomous National University of Mexico (UNAM) was able to extract DNA evidence from the specimens using radiocarbon dating.

Maussan and his team claimed that the corpses possessed a genetic composition 30% distinct from humans.

The hearing aimed to rule on the phenomenon in the Aerial Space Protection Law, which would turn Mexico into the first country in the world to acknowledge the presence of aliens on the planet

However, it’s important to note that these claims have not been scientifically verified and remain a topic of debate among experts.

Sources:
https://im.indiatimes.in/content/2023/Sep/F56_ZT6XMAA3MyH_6501eeb20e582.jpeg

https://i2-prod.mirror.co.uk/incoming/article30955246.ece/ALTERNATES/n615/0_Non-human-alien-corpses-are-displayed-to-the-media-in-Mexico-City.jpg

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Tarak Chandra Das: the worst sufferer of academic amnesia in Indian Anthropology

Public anthropology in practice

National colloquium on "Metamorphoses of the Political: Voices from the Margins of West Bengal"