- By Abhirupa Kundu
- Fri, 15 Sep 2023 03:17 PM (IST)
- Source:JND
Mexico shocked the world when it unveiled two "alien" or non-human corpses during a public hearing of the Congress earlier this week. The first public event on UFOs and aliens in the country which has long been a topic of interest to the people made jaws drop and videos of the mummified aliens garnered widespread views on social media platforms.
These corpses were presented at the Mexican Congress by ufologist and journalist Jamie Maussan. The fact that the entire thing was presented during the Congress hearing provided it some credibility and attracted eyeballs globally. Meanwhile, NASA on September 14 held a session on UFOs or as the space agency prefers to call it unidentified anomalous phenomenon (UAP) and called the corpse remains "unusual things".
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Know About The Two Alien Mummies
Ufologist Jamie Maussan who presented the mummies in the Mexico Congress claimed that they were retrieved in 2017 from Cusco in Peru and were about 1,000 years old. The structures as seen in the live streaming video of the congress seemed to have tiny shrunken heads and were chalky white in colour. The corpses also had three fingers on each hand
According to the reports from the National Autonomous University of Mexico after studying the "UFO specimens" they were able to draw DNA evidence using radiocarbon dating.
A X-ray scan of the two corpses also showed egg like structures and implants of rare materials inside the body of the mummies.
X-ray displayed at the Mexico Congress shows inside the body of the alien corpses.
The exhibition received mixed views with some appalled while others called it "shameful".
NASA On Mexico's Alien Corpses
The United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) held a session on Thursday about an independent panel studying UFOs. When questioned about the alleged "non-human" remains displayed in Mexico, David Spergel, the former head of Princeton University's astrophysics department and chair of NASA's UAP report, said he did not know the nature of the samples but urged that transparency should be maintained.
"This is something that I have only seen on Twitter. When you have unusual things, you want to make the data public," Spergal remarked.
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Later in an interview with BBC he said that Mexico must make the samples available to the world's scientific community and then it can be studied upon to see what's there.