(Copy)  Skull Cast Replica Peruvian Elongated Skull (not an Alien)
(Copy)  Skull Cast Replica Peruvian Elongated Skull (not an Alien)
(Copy)  Skull Cast Replica Peruvian Elongated Skull (not an Alien)
(Copy)  Skull Cast Replica Peruvian Elongated Skull (not an Alien)
(Copy)  Skull Cast Replica Peruvian Elongated Skull (not an Alien)
(Copy)  Skull Cast Replica Peruvian Elongated Skull (not an Alien)
(Copy)  Skull Cast Replica Peruvian Elongated Skull (not an Alien)

(Copy) Skull Cast Replica Peruvian Elongated Skull (not an Alien)

Normaler Preis
$450.00
Sonderpreis
$450.00

 

Cranial deformation skull from Peru.

"Cinnamon” Paracas Elongated skull s cast replica

Shrunken Heads, Oddities & Curiosities.

Cinnamon, is the nickname of a young female of the Paracas culture who died at less than 13 years old about 1000 to 2000 years ago on the coast of Peru. 

My friend Joe Taylor analyzed, molded, and reproduced the original Cinnamon skull on a very tight deadline.  Joe told the caretaker that it looked like a Paracas skull he had molded in Peru.  And it had no sagittal suture, but several Inca bones.  

 

The original skull was featured on the show Ancient Aliens.  

 

Ancient Aliens S12E06 Jared 

 

Ancient Aliens said Cinnamon was a 12 to 15 yr old Scot! Joe Taylor asked Collins why the anthropologist said that. He replied, “I don’t know.”

Joe said it was a 17 year-old with shoveled-out front teeth similar to North American Indians. LA Marzulli said the DNA was Egypt – India. His new film about this will be out in November. He may have more information: On the Trail of the Nephilim #6 DNA – The Final Results

Acquire a CINNAMON Skull Cast $450 plus shipping:

Please allow 30 days for production prior to shipping.

 

The Paracas culture was an Andean society existing between approximately 800 BCE and 100 BCE, with an extensive knowledge of irrigation and water management and that made significant contributions in the textile arts. It was located in what today is the Ica Region of Peru. Most information about the lives of the Paracas people comes from excavations at the large seaside Paracas site on the Paracas Peninsula, first formally investigated in the 1920s by Peruvian archaeologist Julio Tello.