Photo Tours Peru

Mi foto
iam tour guide leading groups for around 8 years but the lasr 2 iam leading only my groups

jueves, 11 de octubre de 2018

Reptiles of Peru

Reptiles of Peru

Peru has around 300 species of reptiles of which around 100 are endemic. Peru's reptile fauna includes spectacular species like giant anacondas and caimans, as well as many other snakes, lizards and turtles.
Spectacled CaimanSpectacled Caiman - Caiman crocodilus

Crocodilians

  1. American Crocodile - Crocodylus acutus
  2. Black Caiman - Melanosuchus niger
  3. Spectacled (White) Caiman - Caiman crocodilus
  4. Smooth-fronted Caiman (Schneider's Dwarf Caiman) - Paleosuchus trigonatus
  5. (Cuvier's) Dwarf Caiman - Paleosuchus palpebrosus
Green AnacondaGreen Anaconda - Eunectes murinus

Turtles and Tortoises


  1. Green Turtle - Chelonia mydas
  2. Loggerhead Turtle - Caretta caretta
  3. Hawksbill Turtle - Eretmochelys imbricata
  4. Leatherback Turtle - Dermochelys coriacea
  5. Olive Ridley Turtle - Lepidochelys olivacea
  6. Amazon Matamata - Chelus fimbriatus
  7. Twist-necked Turtle (South American Flat-headed)- Platemys platycephala
  8. Lesser Toad-headed Turtle - Phrynops gibbus
  9. Greater Toad-headed Turtle - Phrynops raniceps
  10. Geoffroy's Side-necked Turtle - Phrynops geoffroanus
  11. Red Toad-headed Turtle - Phrynops rufipes
  12. Big-Headed River Turtle - Peltocephalus dumerilianus
  13. Yellow-spotted Side-necked Turtle (Taricaya)- Podocnemis unifilis  ...photo 
  14. Giant Amazonian (South American) River Turtle - Podocnemis expansa
  15. Six-tubercled River Turtle - Podocnemis sextuberculata
  16. Scorpion Mud Turtle - Kinosternon scorpiodes
  17. White-lipped Mud Turtle - Kinosternon leucostomum
  18. Yellow-footed Tortoise - Geochelone denticulata
  19. Red-footed Tortoise - Geochelone carbonaria

Birds of Peru

Birds of Peru

Peru has over 1800 species of birds - the second highest number of any country. New species of birds are still being discovered and catalogued by scientists. 42 species have been officially added to science in the last 30 years.
Avibase - Peru Bird Checklist
A complete checklist of the birds of Peru provided by Avibase, including endemic, endangered, threatened, and accidental status.
Books
complete selection of the recommended Field guides and birding location guides.
Updates to "A Field Guide to the Birds of Peru" by Clements.
Audio
 Bird Songs Cover
Endemic Birds
Depending on the authority you consult between 125 and 139 species are endemic to Peru.
Birding trip reports
List of over 200 trip reports and links to other collections of trip reports.

Marine Mammals of Peru


Short-beaked Common Dolphin - Delphinus delphis
Photo by Giovanni Bearzi
Peru has about 35 species of marine mammals, in which we include whales, dolphins, poroises, sea lions, seals and sea otters. There are 21 species of small cetaceans. Most of these live in open waters but only two species, the Bottlenose Dolphin (Tursiops truncatus) and the Burmeister's Porpoise (Phocaena spinnipinis), live in inshore waters.

List of Marine Mammals

  1. South American Sea Lion - Otaria flavescens (formerly byronia)
  2. South American Fur Seal - Arctocephalus australis
  3. Juan Fernández Fur Seal - Arctocephalus philippii (does not breed, seen in small numbers during the winter months at San Juan de Marcona)
  4. Marine Otter - Lontra felina
  5. Risso's Dolphin - Grampus griseus
  6. Bottlenose Dolphin - Tursiops truncatus
  7. Short-Beaked Common Dolphin - Delphinus delphis
  8. Long-Beaked Common Dolphin - Delphinus capensis
  9. Dusky Dolphin - Lagenorhynchus obscurus
  10. Pantropical Spotted Dolphin - Stenella attenuata
  11. Striped Dolphin - Stenella coeruleoalba
  12. Spinner Dolphin - Stenella longirostris
  13. Rough-Toothed dolphin - Steno bredanensis
  14. Pygmy Killer Whale - Feresa attenuata
  15. Killer Whale - Orcinus orca
  16. False Killer Whale - Pseudorca crassidens
  17. Burmeister's porpoise - Phocoena spinipinnis
  18. Fraser's Dolphin - Lagenodelphis hosei
  19. Southern Right-whale Dolphin - Lissodelphis peronii
  20. Short-Finned Pilot Whale - Globicephala macrorhynchus
  21. Long-Finned Pilot Whale - Globicephala melas
  22. Melon-Headed Whale - Peponocephala electra
  23. Antarctic Minke Whale - Balaenoptera bonaerensis
  24. Sei Whale - Balaenoptera borealis
  25. Bryde's Whale - Balaenoptera edeni
  26. Blue Whale - Balaenoptera musculus
  27. Fin Whale - Balaenoptera physalus
  28. Lesser-Beaked Whale - Mesoplodon peruvianus
  29. Blainville's Beaked Whale - Mesoplodon densirostris
  30. Cuvier's Beaked Whale - Ziphius cavirostris
  31. Southern Right Whale - Eubalaena australis
  32. Humpback Whale - Megaptera novaeangliae
  33. Sperm Whale - Physeter macrocephalus
  34. Pygmy Sperm Whale - Kogia breviceps
  35. Dwarf Sperm Whale - Kogia sima

Mammals of Peru

Mammals of Peru

Brown Capuchin Monkey
Brown Capuchin Monkey

Common Woolly Monkey
Common Woolly Monkey - Lagothrix lagotricha
Peru has over 500 species of mammals, of which about 70 are endemic and about 100 are threatened or endangered. These include spectacular species like the Jaguar and Spectacled Bear and rare endemic species like the Yellow-tailed Woolly Monkey.

Land Mammals

  1. Anderson's Mouse-Opossum - Marmosa andersoni
  2. Bishop's Slender Mouse-Opossum - Marmosa bishopi
  3. White-eared Opossum - Didelphis albiventris
  4. Giant Armadillo - Priodones maximus
  5. Nine-banded Armadillo - Dasypus novemcinctus
  6. Hairy Long-nosed Armadillo - Dasypus pilosus  ...photo 
  7. Giant Anteater - Myrmecophaga tridactyla
  8. Southern Tamandua - Tamandua tetradactyla
  9. Silky Anteater - Cyclopes didactylus
  10. Southern Two-toed Sloth - Choloepus didactylus
  11. Pygmy Marmoset - Cebuella pygmaea
  12. Goeldi's Monkey - Callimico goeldi
  13. Black-mantled Tamarin - Saguinus nigricollis
  14. Saddlebacked Tamarin - Saguinus fuscicollis
  15. Emperor Tamarin - Saguinus imperator
  16. Black-chested Moustached Tamarin - Saguinus mystax
  17. Mantled Howler Monkey - Alouatta palliata
  18. Bolivian Red Howler Monkey - Alouatta sara
  19. Andean CatAndean Cat
  20. Red Howler Monkey - Alouatta seniculus
  21. Black-headed Night Money - Aotus nigriceps
  22. Spix's Night (Owl) Monkey - Aotus vociferans
  23. Night Monkey - Aotus trivirgatus
  24. Dusky Titi Monkey - Callicebus moloch
  25. Yellow-handed Titi Monkey - Callicebus lucifer
  26. Andean Titi Monkey - Callicebus oenanthe
  27. Common Squirrel Monkey - Samiri sciureus
  28. Black-capped Squirrel Monkey - Saimiri boliviensis
  29. Brown Capuchin Monkey - Cebus apella
  30. White-Fronted Capuchin Monkey - Cebus albifrons
  31. Common (Brown) Woolly Monkey - Lagothrix lagotricha
  32. Gray Woolly Monkey - Lagothrix cana
  33. Silvery Woolly Monkey - Lagothrix poeppigii
  34. Yellow-tailed Woolly Monkey - Oreonax flavicauda (Endemic)
  35. Peruvian Spider Monkey - Ateles chamek
  36. White-bellied Spider Monkey - Ateles belzebuth
  37. Rio Tapajós Saki - Pithecia irrorata
  38. Monk Saki - Pithecia monhachus
  39. Red Uakari - Cacajao calvus
  40. Sechuran Fox (Zorro) - Pseudalopex sechurae
  41. Culpeo (Andean Fox) - Pseudalopex culpaeus
  42. JaguarJaguar
  43. Bush Dog - Speothos venaticus
  44. Short-eared Dog - Atelocynus microtis
  45. Maned Wolf - Chrysocyon brachyurus
  46. Jaguar - Felis onca
  47. Puma - Felis concolor
  48. Jaguarundi - Felis yagouaroundi  ...photo 
  49. Margay - Leopardus wiedii
  50. Ocelot - Leopardus pardalis
  51. Andean cat - Oreailurus jacobita
  52. Pampas Cat - Oncifelis colocolo
  53. Greater Grison - Galictis vittata  ...photo 
  54. Crab-eating Raccoon - Procyon cancrivorus
  55. South American Coatimundi - Nasua nasua
  56. Kinkajou - Potos flavus  ...photo 
  57. Olingo - Bassaricyon gabbii
  58. Tayra - Eira barbara
  59. Long-tailed Weasel - Mustela frenata
  60. Tropical Weasel - Mulstela africana
  61. Neotropical Otter - Lontra longicaudis
  62. Giant Otter - Pteronura brasiliensis
  63. Striped Hog-nosed Skunk - Conepatus semistriatus  ...photo 
  64. Spectacled Bear - Tremarctos ornatus
  65. Pink River Dolphin (Boto) - Inia geoffrensis
  66. Grey River Dolphin - Sotalia fluviatilis
  67. North Amazon Red Squirrel - Sciurus igniventris
  68. South Amazon Red Squirrel - Sciurus spadiceus
  69. Bolivian Squirrel - Sciurus ignitus
  70. Paca - Agouti paca
  71. Northern ViscachaNorthern Viscacha - Lagidium peruanum
  72. Mountain paca - Agouti taczanowskii  ...photo 
  73. Brown Agouti - Dasyprocta variegata
  74. Kalinowski Agouti - Dasyprocta kalinowskii (Endemic)
  75. Pacarana - Dinomys branickii
  76. Capybara - Hydrochaeris hydrochaeris
  77. Southern Viscacha - Lagidium viscacia
  78. Northern Viscacha - Lagidium peruanum
  79. Short-tailed Chinchilla - Chinchilla brevicaudata
  80. Amazon Bamboo-Rat - Dactylomys dactylinus
  81. Yellow-crowned Brush Rat - Isothrix bistriata
  82. Bare-tailed Tree Rat - Makalata occasius
  83. Mountain tapir - Tapirus pinchaque
  84. Lowland tapir - Tapirus terrestris
  85. Collared Peccary - Tayassu tajacu
  86. White-lipped Peccary - Tayassu pecari
  87. Vicuña - Vicugna vicugna
  88. Guanaco - Lama guanicoe
  89. Marsh DeerMarsh Deer - Blastocerus dichotomus
    Photo by Mariano Gimenez Dixon.
  90. White-tailed Deer - Odocoileus virginianus
  91. Marsh Deer - Blastocerus dichotomus
  92. Red Brocket Deer - Mazama americana
  93. Gray Brocket Deer - Mazama gouazoubira
  94. Dwarf Brocket - Mazama chunyi
  95. Red Dwarf Brocket - Mazama rufina
  96. Northern Pudu - Pudu mephistopheles
  97. North Andean Deer - Hippocamelus antisensis
  98. Amazon Manatee - Trichechus inunguis

miércoles, 19 de febrero de 2014

The rise of the 'cholitas'

The rise of the 'cholitas'


Cholita at Malassa festival
Bolivia's "cholitas" are riding the crest of a resurgence that has seen them transform from being "maids of the middle classes" who were routinely stereotyped and discriminated against, to having real clout in the economic, political and fashion worlds.
With their high bowler hats, puffed skirts and coquettish demeanour, they may look like they have stepped out of an early 20th century television costume drama, but cholas - or as they are affectionately known, cholitas - are very much a driving force in modern Bolivia.
As recently as a decade ago, these indigenous Aymara and Quechua women - who can be easily identified by their distinctive, elegant outfits - would be refused entry to certain restaurants, taxis and even public buses.
They were not permitted to walk freely in the capital La Paz's central square, Plaza Murillo - home to the presidential palace - nor in wealthy suburbs like the city's Zona Sur. Predominantly rural peasants who had migrated to the cities, they were seen as a lower strata who stayed in the home, or worked as servants or hawkers.
"They used to say, 'chola, no no!" when we tried to go to those places," says Carmen Mamani de Espejo, who sells flowers every Saturday at La Paz's Rodriguez Market. "Now it's much better for cholitas. We have more confidence now, we can walk where we like."
Carmen's day-to-day dress is classic cholita. While fashions and seasons change for cholas, as for everyone, none can stray from the "uniform" of a heavy multi-layered skirt with petticoats, long shawl, precariously perched bowler hat, jewellery and little flat pumps.

INTERACTIVE
  • ×

    Cholita
  • Bowler hat

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    Arrived in the 1920s from Europe, intended for male railway workers but were the wrong colour.
  • Hair

    ×
    Always long and plaited at the back. Traditionally the plaits are tied together at the ends with a tassled cord.
  • Jewellery

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    The most powerful cholitas employ security guards when on parade to protect expensive earrings and brooches.
  • Shawl

    ×
    The ‘manta’ is a key part of the uniform, usually held fast with a brooch.
  • Skirt

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    Known as pollera in Spanish, it’s heavy and worn high to give a rounded backside.
  • Petticoats

    ×
    These multi-layered underskirts (enaguas) are often visible and colourful.
Valerie Salinas, who wrote a research paper called Chola pacena: fashion icon, says the Spanish forced the indigenous people to adopt European clothing - similar to those worn by assistant bullfighters in their homeland - to "rein in their subversive airs".
"The chola was very smart, she carried the burden of this dress - something she did not like - and in the end it empowered her and she moulded it to her liking."
Cholitas have always had pride in their culture, but have now reclaimed their image with a confidence that has, for the most part, come from massive social change.

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Carmen Mamani de Espejo
We have more confidence now, we can walk where we like”
Carmen Mamani de Espejo
A gradual rise of grassroots movements in Bolivia - mostly lead by rural peasant groups - which culminated in the 2005 election of the country's first indigenous president, Evo Morales, has been credited with the country's ongoing transformation.
Women and indigenous people have been a particular focus of new policies and laws designed to end the elitism of the past.
While poverty and inequality remain, Bolivia's economy is growing. With more money circulating and with many cholitas being "commerciantes" - sellers of goods - they have more cash to spend, and it shows.
In recent years cholitas have even shown their fortitude by doing battle in the wrestling ring. Every Sunday in El Alto, on the edge of La Paz, polleras and plaits fly as a hard core of women take on the men at their own game, to the delight of locals and tourists alike.
The change is not only economic, but in social attitudes. Cholitas can now be seen studying at university, working in government ministries, banks and lawyers' offices, and anchoring TV and radio programmes.
And in scenes that were unimaginable 10 or 20 years ago, there are cholita fashion shows and increasingly ostentatious displays of expensive designer chola fashion at the forefront of festivals such as La Paz's event of the year, Gran Poder.
Woman in La Paz
"Just 10 years ago it was almost impossible to think of a chola being a lawyer or a journalist, or in front of a television camera, leading a national programme," says Maria Isabel Cordova, who last year set up a new "society" magazine for La Paz's Aymara community.
"Although there may still be some discrimination today, the chola is gaining a place in society."
That she decided to establish her magazine, Ayni Sociales, is remarkable in itself.
"The Aymara community has a very active social life and is an economically emerging market. But dedicating a magazine to showing the glamour of this society would have been unthinkable in the past. Everything has changed."
So much has transformed that in recent months the first specialist cholita modelling agency was established in La Paz. At its helm is the formidable Rosario Aguilar - lawyer, former city politician and a passionate promoter of cholita fashion and culture.
Shoes
When she began pushing the idea of cholita fashion shows nine years ago, it was a struggle to convince people to participate because people felt "no one would want to see it," she says.
"We had to beg the designers to take part. They were intimidated, I don't know if it was fear of rejection. It was also difficult to encourage any cholitas to be models.
"Now we have a long list of people wanting to participate."
It is telling that many of the models and women seen parading at fiestas and big social events are not "real" cholitas.
"A real cholita speaks Aymara and has it in their family. And they have to know how to dress themselves. For example, the skirt has to be really high up to make your bum look big," says Carmen's 27-year-old daughter Clara Espejo Mamani.
She wants to take on her mother and grandmother's cholita identity in the future, but the clothes can be very expensive so she is saving up for her first outfit.
"It's good that some women are dressing like that even if it's not real," says Norma Barrancos Leyva, a cholita and presenter on the Aymara language station Radio San Gabriel.
"It shows that there is pride in the pollera (chola skirt), it's part of our culture and our country's identity."
Norma Barrancos Leyva
Growing up in a village three hours from La Paz, she was told by her grandmother that cholas could not got to university, nor be professors or government ministers.
Now she dresses as a cholita every day in her job as a journalist, because there is no reason not to. In 2012 she spent a month working at BBC Mundo in London, with help from charitable funding.

A badge of honour

Cholita
Many say the word cholita comes from the Spanish word "cholo" (chola for females) - meaning mixed-race or, pejoratively, "halfbreed" or "civilised Indian". But in this case it's been appropriated as a badge of honour. The diminutive "ita", frequently used in Spanish, is affectionate and means small.
As anthropologist Mary Weismantel says in her book Cholas and Pishtacos: stories of race and sex in the Andes, experts have been unable to agree on an exact definition.
In essence "cholos" refers to people of indigenous heritage who in many cases have some Spanish blood - known as "mestizos" - or at least who have adopted elements of Spanish dress, language or culture. Those who moved from rural peasant areas to the city - as many modern day cholitas and their ancestors did - were mocked as cholos attempting to move up the social scale.
Cholos, cholas and cholitas are terms that have also been adopted as modern slang in parts of the USA, to refer to people of Latin American descent, usually Mexican, who are low-income, "tough" and wear clothes associated with the gangster culture.
"I feel so happy I had a chance to do international journalism, which I would not have had before. Cholitas occupy a place in the hierarchy now, they have value."
And it's official. Last October the council in La Paz passed a municipal law declaring that the Chola Paceña (cholita of La Paz) was a central part of the city's cultural heritage.
It added that the "collective ideology has now shifted from [cholitas] merely occupying the informal market and domestic service" to "filling political, media and business" roles.
"This woman, whose stamp is a mixture of Spanish dominion and proud original American, is on the rise," said city politicians.
Cholitas exist all over Bolivia, but the types of skirts and hats change depending on the region. In the cities, there is no male equivalent -cholitas will almost always be seen on the arm of a man in predominantly Western clothing.
In rural areas, some men can be seen wearing more traditional clothing, such as ponchos and woolly hats covering the ears (in the Andes) but even there this is not universal. Special fiestas are the exception, but in everyday life cholita-ism is very much a female phenomenon.
Cholitas still occupy both ends of the social and economic scale, but the balance has shifted.
"Of course some are still poor," says top cholita fashion designer Limbert Cussi. "I work with the cholas who have money. They no longer sell on the street, they import goods from China, Chile, Panama and make a lot of profit.
"High-end cholita fashion can be very expensive. For those richer people, the more expensive the better - a set of gold jewellery for a big event can cost $18,000 (£11,000) alone. It's a competition."
Limbert designs and makes vicuña wool hats for the exclusive end of the market, as well as shawls for special events that can fetch $3,000 (£1,800) each.
Woman applying lipstick
He also set up and runs the Cholita Pacena website, which covers fashion and news, and is in the second year of production of a cholita calendar.
"We wanted to take on that image that cholitas were poor country women with babies on their backs. There's a phenomenon now - women want to wear the pollera.
"Before, people did not want the chola life for their daughters and their daughters would not want it for themselves. Now it's the reverse."
Photos by Paula Dear unless otherwise stated

lunes, 17 de febrero de 2014

Artículos cortos sobre el Perú antiguo Hallazgos, teorías y pensamientos sobre la historia antigua del Perú

Ayer me zambullí en el Archivo General de Catalunya para buscar documentos sobre el Perú y encontré un ejemplar raro del “Estado Político del Reyno del Perú”. Es un documento de 100 páginas escrito a dos columnas con letra imprenta perfectamente conservado y atribuido a Victorino Montero en 1742.
Debo confesar que fue emocionante, y consultando la red descubrí que existe una copia en la Biblioteca Nacional en Lima pero que contiene 48 páginas y tiene un título distinto, así que ignoro si el contenido de ambos sea idéntico. El libro tuvo una repercusión importante en su tiempo, ya que contiene una crítica ácida sobre la corrupción en el virreinato del Perú, y está dirigido al Rey de España.
Otro ejemplar del libro circula a la venta alegremente por Internet
Otro ejemplar del libro circula a la venta alegremente por Internet
En la Lima de 1740 todo es corrupción:“la distancia del monarca es el peligro del dominio”
Es notable el conocimiento del autor en materia de pagos, impuestos y saqueos cometidos por autoridades de la época. El virrey (nunca citado con nombres) es pintado como el director de orquesta de un Estado mafioso confabulado con sus ministros, el clero, los oidores y la burguesía limeña. Por aquel entonces se empiezan a suceder levantamientos por todo el Perú para  derrocar el sistema con poco éxito, pero el autor quiere advertir al Rey que si las cosas siguen por ese camino sus dominios de las Indias peligran.
Como ejemplo, menciona que el virrey tiene asignados 100 soldados como guardias a los que tiene asignados un sueldo de 50 pesos al mes, pero que realmente ocupa a 50, a 20 les paga la mitad, y a otros comerciantes ricos los tiene en nómina como guardias para ser inmunes ante la ley. Suena asombrosamente actual.
“El ser reino rico no prueba que su abundancia la traiga bien repartida su gobierno” (Estado Político del Reyno del Perú)
Una inspiración para la gente ilustrada de la época
El libro se encontraba en la colección de Joan Escofet i Palau (1720), un ingeniero catalán que llegó a convertirse en general. Realizó varios viajes a América para la construcción de obras de ingeniería y edificios. La colección que consulté contiene documentos maravillosos como su cuaderno escolar escrito en latín, un cuaderno con ejercicios de algebra y muchos planos e ilsutraciones de sus obras arquitectónicas. Además contiene libros de temas diversos como la agricultura, la astronomía y un manuscrito con la descripción de un terremoto ocurrido en Cádiz y comparado con el famoso terremoto del Callao del que ya me ocuparé en otro post.
El ejemplar consultado de “Estado Político del Reyno del Perú” estuvo oculto al mundo hasta diciembre de 2012, cuando la familia Bach donó su colección al Archivo de Catalunya. Y se subtitula: “Con algunos arbitrios para su mayor aumento y mejor gobierno, que dirige a SM católica, que Dios guarde, un leal y celoso vasallo”. Algo distinto del ejemplar conocido subtitulado “Gobierno sin ley, ministros relajados, tesoros con povreza, fertilidad sin cultivo, saviduria desestimada, milicia sin honor, ciudades sin amor patricio, la justicia sin templo, hurtos por comercios, integridad tenida por locura, Rey mayor de ricos dominios, pobre de tesoros”.

jueves, 6 de febrero de 2014

Initial DNA analysis of Paracas elongated skull released – with incredible results

Initial DNA analysis of Paracas elongated skull released – with incredible results
Descripción: http://s9.addthis.com/button1-share.gif
Paracas is a desert peninsula located within the Pisco Province in the Ica Region, on the south coast of Peru.  It is here were Peruvian archaeologist, Julio Tello, made an amazing discovery in 1928 – a massive and elaborate graveyard containing tombs filled with the remains of individuals with the largest elongated skulls found anywhere in the world. These have come to be known as the ‘Paracas skulls’. In total, Tello found more than 300 of these elongated skulls, which are believed to date back around 3,000 years. A DNA analysis has now been conducted on one of the skulls and expert Brien Foerster has released preliminary information regarding these enigmatic skulls.
It is well-known that most cases of skull elongation are the result of cranial deformation, head flattening, or head binding, in which the skull is intentionally deformed by applying force over a long period of time. It is usually achieved by binding the head between two pieces of wood, or binding in cloth. However, while cranial deformation changes the shape of the skull, it does not alter its volume, weight, or other features that are characteristic of a regular human skull.
The Paracas skulls, however, are different.  The cranial volume is up to 25 percent larger and 60 percent heavier than conventional human skulls, meaning they could not have been intentionally deformed through head binding/flattening. They also contain only one parietal plate, rather than two. The fact that the skulls’ features are not the result of cranial deformation means that the cause of the elongation is a mystery, and has been for decades. 
Descripción: Artistic - Elongated Skull
An artist’s impression based on a Paracas skull. Photo credit: Marcia Moore / Ciamar Studio
Mr. Juan Navarro, owner and director of the local museum, called the Paracas History Museum, which houses a collection of 35 of the Paracas skulls, allowed the taking of samples from 5 of the skulls. The samples consisted of hair, including roots, a tooth, skull bone and skin, and this process was carefully documented via photos and video. The samples were sent to the late Lloyd Pye, founder of the Starchild Project, who delivered the samples to a geneticist in Texas for DNA testing.  
The results are now back, and Brien Foerster, author of more than ten books and an authority on the ancient elongated headed people of South America, has just revealed the preliminary results of the analysis. He reports on the geneticist's findings:
It had mtDNA (mitochondrial DNA) with mutations unknown in any human, primate, or animal known so far. But a few fragments I was able to sequence from this sample indicate that if these mutations will hold we are dealing with a new human-like creature, very distant from Homo sapiens, Neanderthals and Denisovans.
The implications are of cause huge. “I am not sure it will even fit into the known evolutionary tree,” the geneticist wrote. He added that if the Paracas individuals were so biologically different, they would not have been able to interbreed with humans.
The result of this analysis is only phase one of many phases of analysis due to take place.  The results need to be replicated and more analysis undertaken before final conclusions can be drawn. We will update when more details emerge.

Featured Image: An elongated skull found in Paracas