A Mexican journalist claims to possess extraterrestrial bodies and is reaching out to scientists in the U.S. and Europe for verification.
Mummified remains excavated in Peru, claimed by Mexican journalist Maussan to be extraterrestrial. (Photo: Jam Press).
Two recently excavated mummies in Peru have sparked a wave of controversy following the release of X-ray and ultrasound data of the bodies last March. Archaeologists fear these could be ancient individuals unearthed by grave robbers.
Meanwhile, Mexican journalist Jaime Maussan suggests that these mummies may be “hybrids” between humans and extraterrestrials. He cites claims from some scientists that the two new mummies contain “30% unidentified DNA.” However, critics continue to express skepticism regarding Maussan’s statements.
Maussan recently confirmed to the Daily Mail that further analyses are being conducted.
X-ray image of the mummies in Peru. (Photo: Daily Mail).
Journalist Maussan and his colleagues have made a controversial presentation before the Mexican Congress and have clashed with the Peruvian Ministry of Culture. Maussan is even suing the Peruvian government for damages and the right to transport these mummies to a university in the U.S. for a more thorough independent examination by a third party.
Many disagree with Maussan; historian Christopher Heaney from Pennsylvania has presented two crucial historical facts supporting the view that the remains are not “extraterrestrial” as they appear.
First, the practice of “head binding” among some cultures living in the Andes of Peru has been documented by both Spanish colonizers and local people. Second, according to Heaney, centuries of international tomb raiding, theft, haphazard reburials, and the black market for both genuine and fake Peruvian artifacts have led to significant confusion regarding the historical artifacts of the nation.