The head of the Humanoid Reptile is not a modified head of any known quadrupedal mammal species, reply to the Ph.D. Rodolfo Salas-Gismondi, (2018)

Biól. José de la C. Ríos López, Forensic Expert. José de Jesús Zalce Benítez, Surgeon Dr Edson Salazar Vivanco, Med. Dr. Raymundo Salas Alfaro. and Investigator Thierry Pierre Maurice Jamin.

Summary

The skullss of the Humanoid Reptile specimen have been evaluated by tomography imaging studies (scanners) and from the beginning, Ph.D. Palaeontologist Rodolfo Salas Gismondi was opposed to this case, saying it was a fraud. They would have been manipulated with mammals skulls, from cat (Felis domesticus), dog (Canis familiaris) and camelid skulls (vicuña, guanaco, alpaca and lama) (Lama glama), without being able to specify which species has been used in particular and without showing any analysis supporting his claims.

This scientific investigation showed the unique characteristics of the skulls of these specimens, which never have been described before in any specimen by the current science.

Their phenotypic characteristics refering to a reptile with humanoid form and three fingers demonstrate Salas Gismondi’s bad intentions which become clear, and contribute more to the pseudoscience, to make this discovery something insignificant, without using any scientific methodology deserved by this case.

Background

A great controversy was caused by these three-fingered beings and numerous specialists came to the forefront trying to deny this discovery, without any evaluation of it.

Such is the case of Palaeontologist Salas Gismondi, who published on some forums, where he tries to show this discovery as a fraud. Last August 2017, he spoke out against the case in Anthony Choy’s radio program [1, 2], where he stated that the small beings’ heads 60 cm tall, are made with skulls of animals as dogs, cats and camelids. In view of these allegations, the Inkari Cusco-Peru Institute research team was responsible for corroborating whether these charges were substantiated about the three-fingered dried mummies.

To answer these theories, the Humanoid Reptiles skulls were first compared to the cats’ and dogs’ skulls [3]. Now, we compare them through this article to scanner images of Lamas (Lama glama).

Paleontologist Rodolfo Salas Gismondi, in a French documentary showing the head of a camelid

 

 

In a French documentary showing a camelid’s head, The Paleontologist Rodolfo Salas Gismondi points out the similarity with the appearance of the relics found in Nasca (beings with reptilian features), which would correspond to heads made with various mammals bones (dogs, cats and lamas).

Llama's skull and skull of tridactyl entity

Lama skull (Lama glama) whose some people allege that the heads of the three-fingered reptilian feature specimen (Humanoid Reptile) would come from.

Comparison of Tomographic Sections of Skulls between the Lama and the Nasca Three-Finger Humanoid
Comparison of tomographic sections of skulls (scanner images) between the Lama (Lama glama) and the three-fingered Nasca humanoid (Humanoid Reptile). Rios J. 2018

Comparison of tomographic sections of skulls (scanner images) between the Lama (Lama glama) and the three-fingered Nasca humanoid (Humanoid Reptile). Rios J. 2018

Trabeculae are present in this comparative section in the anterior part of the Lama skull (Lama glama) and the Humanoid Reptile skull.

Comparison of tomographic sections of skulls (scanner images) between the Lama (Lama glama) and the three-fingered Nasca humanoid (Humanoid Reptile). Rios J. 2018

 

 

Comparison of tomographic sections of skulls (scanner images) between the Lama (Lama glama) and the three-fingered Nasca humanoid (Humanoid Reptile). Rios J. 2018

Trabeculae are present in this comparative section in the anterior part of the Lama skull (Lama glama) and the Humanoid Reptile skull.

 

 

Comparison of tomographic sections of skulls (scanner images) between the Lama (Lama glama) and the three-fingered Nasca humanoid (Humanoid Reptile). Rios J. 2018

Trabeculae are present in this comparative section in the anterior part of the Lama skull (Lama glama) and the Humanoid Reptile skull.

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Comparison of tomographic sections of skulls (scanner images) between the Lama (Lama glama) and the three-fingered Nasca humanoid (Humanoid Reptile). Rios J. 2018
Comparison of tomographic sections of skulls (scanner images) between the Lama (Lama glama) and the three-fingered Nasca humanoid (Humanoid Reptile). Rios J. 2018

 

 

Pneumatic part of the Lama skull (Lama glama) and the three-fingered Nasca humanoid (Humanoid Reptile). Rios J. 208.

The pneumatization in the anterior part of the Lama skull (Lama glama), is about 30%, whereas for the Humanoid Reptile we note 1% pneumatisation in this region. Skull which would be supposedly made from a lama skull.

 

 

Comparison of tomographic sections of skulls (scanner images) between the Lama (Lama glama) and the three-fingered Nasca humanoid (Humanoid Reptile). Rios J. 2018

The inner base of the two skulls shows a great difference in both specimens.

Comparison of tomographic sections of skulls (scanner images) between the Lama (Lama glama) and the three-fingered Nasca humanoid (Humanoid Reptile). Rios J. 2018
Comparison of tympanic bullae between lama, cat, wild dog and the tridactyl humanoid

 

 

Comparison of tympanic bubbles between lama (Lama glama), cat (Feliz silvestris ssp.), wild dog (Lycaon pictus) and the tridactyl humanoid (Reptil humanoide). Ríos J. 2018.

Taking as a reference the location of the tympanic bubbles of different adult animals skulls such as the dog (Lycaon pictus), the llama (Lama glama), the cat (Felis ssp.) and comparing them with the Humanoid Reptile‘s, the largest is the Humanoid Reptile‘s, followed by the dog’s, then the lama’s and finally, the smallest dimension, the cat’s.

Base of a Humanoid Reptile Skull

Base of the lower part of the skull of one of the humanoid Reptile’s heads belonging to Paul Ronceros, from which he raised the skin, thinking it was the head of a quadruped mammal (dog, cat and / or cameleid). We can see the base of the skull which has not been carved, cut or filed and where we can observe a longitudinal suture next to the Foramen Magnum whose shape of the orifice (occipital hole) is very singular with its square shape.

Bottom view of a llama skull

Bottom view of the skull where we can observe the camelid’s hard roof of the mouth (Lama glama), which was suggested by Salas Gismondi as being one of the parts forming the head of the Humanoid Reptile.

Conclusions

The Humanoid Reptile’s heads have a 1% pneumatic zone located in the posterior or occipital region, in comparison with the Lama glama skull, whose front part of the skull has a 30% pneumatic zone, which extends over a quarter of the skull from front to back.

The head of these specimens has a square-shaped Foramen Magnum, does not have any jaw, the location of the condyles is behind the form, in terrestrial species the condyles are located in the front part of the Foramen Magnum.

The cranial perimeter is larger at the location of the tympanic bubble in the Humanoid Reptile than in the dog, llama and cat.

The base of the skull has two transverse sutures, one anterior to the square formed Foramen Magnum and the other in the posterior part.

These skulls or heads show no evidence of manipulation, since the skin covering them has no alteration, tear, cut or suture, and no sign of manipulation on the bones that compose them.

Therefore, the skull of these specimens does not match any known land mammal skull being more macrocephalic because of the size of these specimens to the characteristics of reptiles.

Special thanks

To the Inkari Cusco-Peru Institute, for having facilitated the obtaining of tomographic (scanners) and radiographic images for the execution of this scientific research.

References

  1. Mounted Heads with skulls of animals. Dr. Rodolfo Salas-Gismondi (Department of Paleontology of Vertebrates, Museum of Natural History, UNMSM, Lima – Peru and Research Assistant, Palaeontology Division, American Museum of Natural History Available on: https://drive.google.com/open?id=1lXTrDYibqt4FxXNUpQGSe53sA1n1-TkV
  2. Lama skull – Lama Glama. Available on: http://digimorph.org/specimens/Lama_glama/
  3. Humanoid Reptiles skulls: “Just a scale problem”: https://www.the-alien-project.com/en/2018/05/01/hmanoid-reptilians-skull-just-scale-problem/

Traduction : Catherine Rayer

©Jose de Cruz Ríos López / Instituto Inkari Cusco

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