These mythological entities appear to continue their mission to this day, and many believe they are emissaries from outer space, an extraterrestrial species known as the Nordic or Pleiadian race. Could the Rh-negative blood type be another connecting factor?Īncient civilizations around the world have spoken of angelic beings that descended from the sky, sent by God to assist humanity by sharing their spiritual and emotional wisdom with Earthlings. Marzulli have connected these red-haired skulls to the Nephilim. The gene for red hair originates in the Middle East and Europe. In South America, some of the bizarrely-shaped, oblong Paracas skulls were found to have red hair in an area where that hair color isn’t native.
In the Book of Enoch, the Nephilim, also known as the Watchers, descend from the heavens and mate with humans, creating a human-angel hybrid. Others have posited the idea that the Basques could have been the pure descendants of the first modern humans to arrive in Europe.īut another theory that falls in the more ethereal category is that the Nephilim of biblical lore are responsible for Rh-negative blood types. But this language is not just isolated, it’s completely unrelated to other European languages.Ī more mundane explanation for the homogenous traits of people from the Basque region is the idea that early farmers, during the start of the agricultural revolution, mixed with local hunters, before becoming isolated for thousands of years preserving their language and genetics. Those from the Basque are also the only people of Western Europe who continue to speak an indigenous Indo-European language – an isolated tongue not spoken anywhere else in Europe. Here, straddling the Pyrenees mountains, up to 40 percent of the population is Rh-negative, and that’s not the only distinguishing feature of the region. The gene that produces Rh-negative is largely present in Caucasians, with the highest concentration found in a small region on the Iberian Peninsula between France and Spain, known as the Basque region. In Asia, that proportion is even lower with only about one percent of the population possessing this rare blood type. While humans are thought to all share a common ancestor, originating in sub-Saharan Africa, the number of Rh-negative Africans is disproportionately low compared to others – about three percent. But this percentage of the population is not spread evenly across all areas of the planet. Could there be a similar incompatibility between Rh-negative mothers and Rh-positive babies?Ībout 15 percent of the world’s population has the Rh-negative distinction, with the D-antigen absent in their veins. The same goes for a liger – the progeny of a lion and a tiger – the two species chromosomes don’t match, so they produce infertile offspring. When a horse and donkey mate, the genetic differences result in a sterile mule. When we look at hybrid animals in other species, there are similar incompatibilities and sometimes even complete infertility. But, as strange as it sounds, others have speculated at the possibility that it may have come from an alien species that interbred with humans or engineered us in some way, producing a hybrid bloodline. Some believe Rh-negative blood is simply a mutation that came about at some unknown time in our evolution.
This complication is known as hemolytic disease. Oddly, the woman’s body will kill its own fetus, unless given a rare antibody known as Rh-D immunoglobulin.
If a woman with Rh-negative blood becomes pregnant with an Rh-positive baby, her body will produce antigens signaling to her immune system that her fetus is essentially toxic.