Doctors said lumps within the alleged extraterrestrial's abdomen suggest the possibility of eggs. (Image: @IndianTechGuide/Twitter)
Mexican doctors have conducted extensive tests on the remains dubbed "non-human beings” presented in front of the country’s Congress days back and have ruled that one of the 1,000-year-old specimens was “alive, intact, biological, and in gestation”. The doctors also debunked that the specimens were human-made.
At the Noor Clinic, under the watchful gaze of a global audience on Jaime Maussan's YouTube channel, scientists meticulously examined the two specimens. Their goal: to determine the authenticity of the so-called extraterrestrial remains.
Director José Zalce Benitez, from the Health Sciences Research Institute in the Mexican navy's office, left no room for doubt. He declared, "We found no evidence of any assembly or manipulation of the skulls."
Benitez's team, referring to the specimen that was “alive”, pointed at the conspicuous lumps within the alleged extraterrestrial's abdomen, suggesting the possibility of eggs. "I can affirm that these bodies have no relation to human beings," he stated.
These beings, purportedly unearthed in Cusco, Peru, in 2017, possess distinctive characteristics. They have elongated heads, three fingers on each hand, and a humanoid shape featuring two arms and two legs.
Their bones are unusually light and sturdy, while the presence of rare elements like cadmium and osmium has baffled experts. A staggering one-third of their DNA remains a mystery.
Jaime Maussan, a known figure in the world of UFO enthusiasts, affirmed that these findings mark a pivotal moment in the quest for extraterrestrial life.
"These specimens are not part of our evolutionary history of Earth," he asserted before Mexican government officials and US representatives. "They are not beings recovered from a UFO crash. Instead, they were found in diatom (algae) mines and subsequently became fossilized."
However, there has been skepticism.
Physics professor Brian Cox has been calling for a sample to be sent to biologic tech company 23andMe for independent verification that the specimens are aliens.
“It’s very unlikely that an intelligent species that evolved on another planet would look like us,” he had said last week.
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