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The Box of Oddities

The Tridactyl Mummies: Three Fingers, Metallic Implants, and a Mystery Science Can’t Solve

The Box of Oddities

John Elliott and Kat Walls

Comedy, True Crime, Society & Culture

4.92.9K Ratings

🗓️ 5 January 2026

⏱️ 36 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

What if a haunting didn’t involve ghosts — but the lingering smell of carnival food? This episode of The Box of Oddities opens with an unsettling sensory mystery tied to a long-demolished amusement park, then plunges into one of the most stubborn and controversial archaeological puzzles of modern times: the tridactyl mummies of Peru. Discovered near the Nazca region, these small humanoid mummies feature three fingers, three toes, elongated skulls, and internal anatomy that does not appear to be the result of a simple hoax. CT scans and MRIs show articulated skeletons with no apparent signs of assembly. Carbon dating places them roughly 1,700–1,800 years old. DNA testing reveals material consistent with known Earth life — alongside a troubling percentage classified as unknown. Some specimens even appear to contain metallic implants made from rare alloys, positioned as if intentionally placed during life. One reportedly shows signs of a fetus, suggesting reproduction rather than fabrication. Scientists remain cautious. Skeptics remain vocal. And yet, after years of imaging and analysis, these bodies stubbornly resist tidy explanations. They may not be aliens — but they also may not be anything science has fully named yet. Then, in classic Box fashion, the episode pivots from the inexplicable to the unexpectedly hopeful. Meet the real-world heroes you probably didn’t expect: trained landmine-detecting rats. These remarkable animals are saving lives across former war zones by sniffing out explosives buried decades ago. One rat in particular, Ronan, has broken world records and helped return deadly land to safe use — proving that sometimes the strangest solutions are also the most effective. From phantom fairground smells to unresolved biological mysteries to rats quietly changing the world, this episode is a reminder that the universe is weird, complicated, and occasionally wonderful — whether we understand it or not. Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices

Transcript

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0:00.0

The Box of Oddities.

0:02.6

So yesterday was Lukie's gotcha day.

0:05.8

Two years.

0:06.8

We celebrated by going to the dog park, which isn't far from where we live.

0:11.8

While we were there, I noticed something peculiar for the second time.

0:17.5

It smelled like doughboys.

0:19.2

And when she says doughboy, she means the delicious carnival

0:22.6

snack, not World War I American infantry personnel. Mm-hmm. I mean, basically fried

0:30.8

fair food. You know that weird amalgamation of like fries and doughboys and something sweet

0:37.0

and onions? Yeah. Yes. That's what it smells like and i kept

0:42.2

looking around and going what is making that smell because there's nothing that makes sense

0:46.5

and then i pointed out that this whole area that we live in this whole, used to be an amusement park.

0:56.9

And it was completely raised years ago.

1:02.3

And where the dog park is is right on the area that used to be the midway.

1:07.9

So you were suggesting that it was stone tape theory.

1:11.2

But with smell.

1:12.3

But with fair food smell.

1:15.0

Yeah.

1:15.3

I love that idea.

1:16.6

That is the best haunting I can think of.

1:19.2

Carnival food.

1:21.2

I love the idea that we might live on a haunted, closed-down amusement park ground.

...

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