Post by SKYSUMMIT on Apr 24, 2013 9:53:18 GMT -6
After images were released of what
looks like a 6-inch alien creature, a lot of buzz began to generate
around a documentary film titled “Sirius.” Filmmakers said the
documentary would reveal that the DNA of the miniature creature couldn’t
be medically classified, insinuating that it was a foreign life form.
Well, the DNA test results are in. As it turns out, the 6-inch humanoid is, in fact, likely human.
“I can say with absolute certainty that
it is not a monkey. It is human — closer to human than chimpanzees. It
lived to the age of six to eight. Obviously, it was breathing, it was
eating, it was metabolizing. It calls into question how big the thing
might have been when it was born,”said Garry Nolan, director of stem
cell biology at Stanford University’s School of Medicine in California.
“The DNA tells the story and we have
the computational techniques that allows us to determine, in very short
order, whether, in fact, this is human,” Nolan explains in the film.
“‘Sirius’ focuses on the remains of the
small humanoid, nicknamed Ata, that was discovered in Chile’s Atacama
Desert 10 years ago and has, literally, gone through different hands and
ownership since then,” The Huffington Post notes.
HuffPost has more background on the documentary:
The film also explores an
ongoing grassroots movement to get the U.S. government to reveal what it
reportedly knows about UFOs, extraterrestrials and the availability of
advanced alternative energy technologies that could greatly benefit
everyone on Earth.
The primary force behind “Sirius” is
Steven Greer, a former emergency room doctor who founded the Center for
the Study of Extraterrestrial Intelligence (CSETI) and The Disclosure Project.
One odd thing about the Ata controversy is how it came to the recent attention of the American public.
Early in the documentary, Greer refers
to Ata as an extraterrestrial being, explaining how it was found in the
Atacama Desert and “we don’t know how it came about.” That seems
strange because HuffPost recently reported
on the well known history of little Ata since its discovery 10 years
ago and subsequent moving from hand to hand, ending up in Spain.