Elongated skulls are a very interesting global phenomenon. Across the planet, researchers keep discovering traces of these mysterious artifacts, the nature of which supposedly defies any explanation. Many researchers enthusiastically call elongated skulls evidence of the existence of forbidden archeology. And some of them even believe that they are proof that the real history of mankind is being hidden from most people.
Among the most interesting examples of elongated skulls are the so-called skulls of the Paracas culture. They were discovered in the province of Pisco, Peru, almost a hundred years ago. Once upon a time, an Incan empire flourished in those places. It is believed that the skulls are about 3,000 years old. And the DNA tests allegedly showed that the elongated skulls of the Paracas culture belong to a completely unknown species of man.
A story has been circulating around alien and UFO conspiracy websites since 2014, alleging that DNA tests done on cone-shaped skulls found in the Paracas region of Peru show they are of extraterrestrial origin. The strange appearance of the skulls coupled with the outlandish claim continues to give the story legs, and it continues to make the rounds as of mid-January 2017:
The director of the Paracas Museum of History sent five samples of the Par acas skulls to undergo genetic testing, and the results were mesmerizing. The samples, which consisted of hair, skin
Interestingly, the mitochondrial DNA, which is inherited from the mother, showed mutations that were unknown to any man, primate, or animal found on planet Earth. The mutations present in the samples of the Paracas skulls suggest that researchers were dealing with a completely new ‘human-like being,’ very different from Homo sapiens, Neanderthals, or Denisovans.
The announcement in 2014 that the skulls had non-human DNA was originally promoted by Brien Foerster, a figure known for pseudoscience. As RationalWiki notes:
Foerster has little in the way of relevant scientific qualifications but runs a tour company and was a regular on the very unscientific History Channel show Ancient Aliens, the museum is a private company owned by a man with no scientific qualifications, not an academic institution, and the results were announced not in a peer reviewed journal but on Facebook. Suspiciously, the geneticist who supposedly conducted the tests refused to own up and his or her identity was kept secret by Foerster.
The elongated shape of the skulls is most likely due to a practice known to anthropologists as “artificial cranial deformation.” This has been practiced in a number of cultures from a wide variety of geographies, going back millennia:
Experts speculate that the widespread tradition could stem from a host of motivations, not least beauty. The latest hypothesis to join the list, however, is the belief that skull shaping could have been a boon for survival for some who practiced it, as proposed by Marta Alfonso-Durruty, an anthropologist at Kansas State University, and colleagues in a new research paper published in the American Journal of Physical Anthropology.
The team examined 60 skulls from a group of hunter-gatherers that lived in Southern Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego 2,000 years ago, Hogenboom writes. Thirty percent of the skulls showed signs of intentional deformation, the first evidence that people in Patagonia practiced such modification, which could have become widespread because, like tribal tattoos or team jerseys, it promoted group cohesion. Unlike clothing, however, body modification permanently differentiates in-group members from outsiders.
In Patagonia, however, the hunter gatherers with modified skulls lived in more diffuse groups, created by the need to move from place to place in search of food in a resource-scarce region. Building relationships with individuals to gain access to certain areas would have been valuable. Modified skulls could have served that purpose, signaling a trusted, connected person.
The Paracas skulls are on display at the National Museum of Archaeology, Anthropology, and History in Lima, Peru, and were first discovered in the 1920s by the Peruvian archaeologist, Julio Tello. They are an apparent source of interest to paranormalists who search for signs of extraterrestrial or Biblical phenomena. Some websites put forward the claim that the skulls belong to nephilim, Biblical creatures that, according to Genesis, were the offspring of gods and human women.
This is not the first time a discovery of human remains with elongated skulls has sparked the hopes of UFO enthusiasts. A 2015 discovery of a prehistoric woman in Russia, at a site known as Arkaim, or “Russia’s Stonehenge,” with a similar deformity also created a buzz:
Some believe that the skull’s high forehead is characteristic of the so-called “alien grey” often depicted as large-eyed and large-foreheaded beings in sci-fi films and even hoaxes.
Archaeologists, though, are not convinced of the alien theory, saying that the bones belonged to a human who lived about 2,000 years ago.
The scientists who The scientists who shared photos of the discovery said that the body was likely from the second or third century after Christ. They also have a good explanation for the conehead skull.
Archaeologists claim that the remains belonged to a woman from a 4,000 BC settlement, and the shape of the skull supports that claim.