Dr. Steven Greer Interview With Carol Rosin | (The Atacama Coverup) PART 1/4
Analysis Summary
Summary
The account involves a medical doctor who became interested in a small being found in the Atacama Desert of Chile in 2003. The doctor first learned about the being in 2009 and later investigated it, noting its unusual skeletal features. In 2012, the doctor conducted genetic studies with a colleague from Stanford University. They found that nearly 10% of the genetic material did not match human DNA, which raised questions about the being's origins. Despite initial excitement, the findings were later misrepresented in the media as a deformed human fetus. The doctor expressed concern over the integrity of scientific research and the handling of the case, which led to a significant impact on their work and the public's understanding of the specimen.
Program Intelligence Analysis
The discussion centers around the Atacama humanoid, a specimen with unusual anatomical features and genetic anomalies. Claims of scientific misconduct and misrepresentation in peer-reviewed journals are highlighted, raising concerns about the integrity of scientific research in this field.
Genetic analysis of the Atacama humanoid shows significant deviations from human DNA, suggesting it is not a deformed human fetus as claimed in mainstream reports.
Dr. Steven Greer
“I never called it an alien or an ET; I said it's unusual and we do not know what it is.”
Gary Nolan
“This is something very anomalous.”
Unnamed Geneticist
“This is an academic scandal of the first order magnitude.”
Managed by: Disclosure Project
Investigate the genetic makeup of a small humanoid found in the Atacama Desert
The Atacama humanoid, found in Chile, has anatomical anomalies such as ten ribs instead of twelve and four skull bones instead of six.
Genetic analysis revealed that almost 10% of the genetic material from the Atacama humanoid does not match human DNA.
The genetic study published in the journal Genome Research misrepresented the Atacama humanoid as a deformed human fetus.
The Atacama humanoid was initially believed to be a six to eight-year-old child based on skeletal analysis.
There is a pattern of scientific corruption and junk science in peer-reviewed journals, as evidenced by the Atacama humanoid study.