The Amphibian Hypothesis: The Nazca J-Type Mummy, Tridactyl Morphology, and the Hidden Evolutionary Puzzle
Abstract
The J-type mummy of Nazca, Peru, represents the most complete and best-preserved example of tridactyl morphology discovered to date. Unlike fragmented or disputed specimens, it provides both external and internal anatomical evidence, allowing for rigorous analysis. CT scans and radiographs reveal consistent diagnostic features: tridactyl hands and feet, a cordiform (heart-shaped) skull, a pronounced brow ridge or crest, and a thoracic structure distinct from Homo sapiens. The absence of mammary glands indicates a non-mammalian lineage, while radiographs showing egg-like structures suggest possible oviparous reproduction. Comparative evidence with known tridactyl amphibians, such as Syncope tridactyla, provides a natural precedent for digit reduction and skeletal traits like the fused radioulna. Beyond biology, cultural artifacts across Peru — petroglyphs, textiles, ceramics, and geoglyphs — mirror these features, suggesting the J-type was embedded in Andean cultural memory. This study synthesizes anatomical and cultural findings to argue that the J-type cannot be dismissed as a hoax or myth alone, but must be systematically examined as a biological and cultural phenomenon.
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