"In the spring of 2017, Gaia filmmakers joined researchers and scientists just outside of Nazca, Peru to investigate an unearthed mummified body. Independent scientists and universities are currently analyzing findings, with initial examinations suggesting the possibility of material that is unlike anything found in the fossil record.
Could this be a primitive human with an intentional or developmental deformity, or undeniable evidence that a non-human species exists?"
This is the original claim from the video, and from Gaia. There's no data, anywhere on the internet, to support any of the scientific claims made in the video about the age of the specimen or of the location where it was discovered. If it was unearthed in the Spring, I'd want to know specifically when and where - wouldn't you? If it was dated to a certain time period, I'd want to at least be able to look over that data and throw it in the face of people who said it didn't actually exist, wouldn't you? If that "white dust" is actually an historically more viable way of preserving ancient bodies that the Peruvians discovered, I'd want to know what it was, how it worked, and which culture used it , wouldn't you? If it somehow preserved organs for 1700 years, that would be a remarkable scientific discovery...
But, almost not surprisingly, that data simply doesn't exist... If it does, please cite it here.
Look, I don't care what you want to believe - but those types of gaps in information are a problem for anyone making any claim about anything.
Pseudoscience claims are able to spread among the common people because they purposefully don't provide information that can be checked, tested, or reviewed conclusively. All of those very basic questions that I asked are questions that you don't have answers to. You don't have them because the data simply isn't there. And, like I've said, if something is real, then there data to validate it.
That's something that needs to be considered before even bothering to take this claim, or any others, seriously.