Ancient culture researcher Pablo Enrique Garcia Sanchez from Mexico announced the discovery of an alien mummy as well as a separate alien skull, publicly presenting the findings the other day and posting a photo on his Facebook profile.
Sanchez says he found these remains, along with ancient artifacts, in a mine near Taxco, Guerrero, and believes they belong to an unknown culture that inhabited Mexico in ancient times.
The strange mummy, which looks like a kind of humanoid creature with a long body and bent legs, Sanchez called “Citlaltemini” (“Brother to the Stars”).
This mummy reportedly has four fingers and four toes, and a skull so oddly shaped that it’s hard to describe it in general.
But even more questions are raised by the separate skull discovered, which looks more like the remains of a monster from a science fiction movie.
The skull has sharp teeth, its sides are covered in some sort of geometric pattern scratched into the bone, and its upper part is very elongated.
The photos and press articles generated a lot of interest from netizens, with many calling the mummy and skull “crude fakes.”
In particular, they wrote that the skull of the “alien” was created from the skull of a pig.
At the same time, Pablo Enrique Garcia Sanchez is considered a fairly serious scientist. He holds postgraduate degrees from the National Autonomous University of Mexico and the Universities of the States of Guerrero and Morelos, and has also received the Golden Microphone Award from the Chamber of Deputies of Mexico City.
In addition to the mummy and skull, Sanchez also showed artifacts found in the same cave. They are covered in intricate patterns and some of them look like alien heads with almond-shaped dark eyes.
Many Mexican newspapers write about Sanchez’s mummy, skull and strange artifacts, but what other scientists think about it is still unknown.