From a Family Heirloom to a Global Mystery

My path into this current investigation, however, began not in a laboratory, but with a figure from Guatemala—a piece my father gave me, one that has been in my family for generations.
At first glance, it seemed unusual. On closer study, I realized it shared traits with figures found all over the world.
Patterns Across Cultures
-
Mexico: The Olmec and Mezcala carved beings in the same crouched stance, with unmistakable three-digit hands.
-
Peru: Among the Chavín and Chimu civilizations, the form appears again—tridactyl, with a heavy brow ridge.
-
China: The Hongshan culture created figures bearing these same anomalies.
-
Africa: From Sierra Leone, the Nomoli and Pombo figures echo these features once more.
-
Mongolia: Countless artifacts repeat the same pattern, etched into stone and preserved in collections.
What began as a single heirloom quickly unfolded into a pattern that spans continents and centuries.
More Than Figurines
These features are not limited to statues alone. I have documented over 40 locations worldwide where the same anomalies appear in pottery, textiles, and even petroglyphs.
By applying diagnostic criteria, I’ve been able to match specific tridactyl types across these artifacts. The most prevalent—and the most controversial—is the J-Type mummy from Peru.
Scientific Evidence
In Peru, CT scans of the J-Type confirm these traits in anatomical detail. The same three hallmarks appear consistently:
-
Tridactyl hands — three elongated fingers.
-
Pronounced brow ridge.
-
The distinctive T-shaped face.
Across continents, across time, and across mediums, these traits emerge again and again.
A Door Opens
What started with a single figure passed down from my father has opened the door to a global mystery. Whether these patterns represent cultural archetypes, shared myths, or evidence of something far more complex, one fact remains:
They are too consistent to ignore.
This journey continues with Tridactyls.online, where evidence from around the world is gathered, compared, and shared openly—so that anyone can explore the patterns for themselves.
Leave a Comment