What is a Tridactyl?
A Tridactyl is a Genus of three-fingered beings found desiccated in a cave near Nazca, Peru in 2017.Commonly known as the Nazca Mummies, the beings were found covered in a coating of diatamceous earth which acted as a deterrent from degradation by pests.
Exhibiting a wide range of morphology by species and by individual specimens.
The species is best exemplified by the small, J-types, named for one of the egg-bearing individuals, Josefina, a seemingly a bipedal humanoid with certain non-human features beyond the tridactylism such as the furcula (wishbone) like fused clavicle, and an anomalous semi-circular rib-cage that is connected by gastralia, “abdominal ribs”, a feature first scene in the earliest of tetropods.
The collective of tridactyl specimens, over 20 as of March 2025, include less humanoid “insectoids” with spinal protrusions and an over-sized abdomen providing a definitive non-human appearance.
Most significantly are the hybrid tridactyls appearing to share the morphology of the smaller J-types to a lesser degree, with a significant amount of primate DNA providing a form similar to humans aside from the unusual elongated cranial form and tridactylsm.