Unusual scene this week in Mexico. Mexican parliamentarians interviewed a self-proclaimed and controversial UFO specialist on Tuesday, September 12. His name: Jaime Maussan, a journalist who works in the study of unidentified flying and aerospace objects and who did not arrive empty-handed at the Mexican Congress.
“Non-human beings”, according to a Mexican journalist
Next to it, two sarcophagi containing mummies presented by Jaime Maussan as fossils of extraterrestrial creatures. Very small specimens, with dry heads and three-fingered hands, discovered according to him in Peru in 2017.
“They are non-human beings, who are not part of our terrestrial evolution,” said Jaime Maussan. To support his claims, the journalist indicated that carbon-14 dating tests carried out at the National Autonomous University of Mexico (UNAM) would have determined that these specimens were approximately 1,000 years old.
Only after this presentation, the Mexican university published a press release confirming that carbon dating had been performed on skin samples provided by a client but that the researchers had never been in direct contact with the specimens exhibited at the Mexican Congress.
The laboratory “disassociates” itself from the results
Consequently, the university laboratory behind these tests “disassociates itself from any use, interpretation or distortion of the results it provides.”
“In no case do we draw conclusions about the origin of these samples,” UNAM writes again.
“These conclusions are unfounded due to lack of evidence,” Antígona Segura also declared to the New York Times. The astrobiologist, who works for an institute attached to NASA dedicated to exoplanet research, described this presentation as “very embarrassing.”
A set of human and animal remains.
These mummies “are a creation denounced years ago,” stated the French edition of the Huffington Post, recalling the controversies surrounding the controversial documentary “Unearthing Nazca” from 2017. One of the mummies “was examined by an anthropologist. His conclusions are clear: The mummy in question is a set of different mummified human remains,” the media adds.
Given the impact of this story, the Peruvian media took advantage of it and raised the hypothesis according to which Jaime Maussan – without knowing how he would have recovered them – would have found out about these mummies through a Peruvian tomb robber. Specimens made by combining human and animal bones with plant fibers and synthetic adhesives. Another analysis carried out in 2021 determined that the head of one of the specimens was a deteriorated llama skull.
This controversy occurs less than two months after a hearing on UFOs in the US Congress and while NASA takes the study of “unidentified anomalous phenomena” more seriously, a term that however intends to replace UFO to distance itself. of speculation about extraterrestrial visits to Earth. .
Source: BFM TV

