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- Q12155967 subject Q18698515.
- Q12155967 subject Q7153635.
- Q12155967 subject Q8186981.
- Q12155967 subject Q8235784.
- Q12155967 subject Q8527149.
- Q12155967 abstract "Ata is the common name given to the 6-inch (150 mm)-long skeletal remains of a human that was found during 2003 in a deserted Chilean town in the Atacama Desert, hence the abbreviated name. The remains have been placed in a private collection in Spain. According to a local Chilean newspaper, La Estrella de Arica, Ata was found in northern Chile by Oscar Muñoz, who later sold the remains; their current owner is Ramón Navia-Osorio, a Spanish businessman.Although initially thought to be older, the remains have been dated to the last few decades, and found to contain high-quality DNA, suitable for scientific analysis. Ata has an irregularly shaped skull and a total of 10 ribs. Ata also may have suffered from oxycephaly. Considering that the frontal suture of the skull is very open and the hands and feet not fully ossified, anatomist and paleoanthropologist William Jungers has suggested that it was a human fetus that was born prematurely and died before or shortly after birth. An alternative hypothesis, by immunologist Garry Nolan, is that Ata had a combination of genetic disorders and thus died prematurely. Nolan's more speculative suggestion is that Ata suffered from a very severe form of dwarfism, but no genes for dwarfism were found during his team's genetic analysis. Furthermore, a professor of medicine, Ralph Lachman, said that dwarfism could not account for all the features found in Ata.During the DNA analysis by Nolan, the B2 haplotype group was found in the remains. Haplogroups identify human genetic populations that often are associated distinctly with particular geographic regions around the globe. Combined with the alleles found in the mitochondrial DNA contained in the remains, the findings suggested that Ata is indigenous to the western region of South America. While ufologists have said they think that Ata is an extraterrestrial, this speculation is inconsistent with the human genetic material that is present in the remains.".
- Q12155967 wikiPageExternalLink atacama-humanoid-human-researchers-say-245416.
- Q12155967 wikiPageWikiLink Q1121544.
- Q12155967 wikiPageWikiLink Q15052349.
- Q12155967 wikiPageWikiLink Q18698515.
- Q12155967 wikiPageWikiLink Q219611.
- Q12155967 wikiPageWikiLink Q27075.
- Q12155967 wikiPageWikiLink Q298.
- Q12155967 wikiPageWikiLink Q3813599.
- Q12155967 wikiPageWikiLink Q47141.
- Q12155967 wikiPageWikiLink Q4716254.
- Q12155967 wikiPageWikiLink Q514.
- Q12155967 wikiPageWikiLink Q7153635.
- Q12155967 wikiPageWikiLink Q7206.
- Q12155967 wikiPageWikiLink Q7430.
- Q12155967 wikiPageWikiLink Q80711.
- Q12155967 wikiPageWikiLink Q80726.
- Q12155967 wikiPageWikiLink Q8186981.
- Q12155967 wikiPageWikiLink Q8235784.
- Q12155967 wikiPageWikiLink Q832528.
- Q12155967 wikiPageWikiLink Q8527149.
- Q12155967 comment "Ata is the common name given to the 6-inch (150 mm)-long skeletal remains of a human that was found during 2003 in a deserted Chilean town in the Atacama Desert, hence the abbreviated name. The remains have been placed in a private collection in Spain.".
- Q12155967 label "Atacama skeleton".