RUSSIAN SCIENTISTS HAVE PROVED THAT EXTRATERRESTRIAL LIFE WAS - TopicsExpress



          

RUSSIAN SCIENTISTS HAVE PROVED THAT EXTRATERRESTRIAL LIFE WAS BROUGHT TO EARTH BY METEORITES OR THE PANSPERMIA THEORY IS THE TRUTH. WATCH THIS VIDEO: youtube/watch?v=bpVX2C3LLOA Russian scientists confirmed experimentally the possibility of life have been brought to Earth from space by meteorites during the return of the orbit of the satellite Foton-M №4 said Alexander Slobodkin, scientist at the Institute of Microbiology, Academy of Sciences of Russia. We were able to prove that one of our thermophilic bacteria survived on the surface of the meteorite during the passage of the dense layers of the atmosphere, said Slobodkin XV Conference on Space Biology and Aerospace Medicine in Moscow. In the words of scientists from 11 thermophilic bacterial spores and 4 formed a line of bacteria survived for a flight to space and return to earth. The scientist had difficulty in revealing the precise amount of surviving microorganisms. SCIENTISTS AFFIRM: ROCK SOLID PROOF OF ALIEN LIFE WITHIN METEORITES, FOSSILIZED ALGAE. Fossilized algae recently discovered in a meteorite from Sri Lanka could finally prove the existence of extraterrestrial life, the authors of the new study say. In an article recently published in the Journal of Cosmology titled fossil diatoms of a new Carbonaceous Meteorite, scientists in the United Kingdom and Sri Lanka claim to have found fossilized algae in a meteor. The document claims that microscopic fossilized diatoms were found in the sample, which dropped in Sri Lanka in December last year. The finding, the study suggests is strong evidence to support the theory of panspermia comment. The theory argues that life is spread across planets meteorites and asteroids. Panspermia suggests that life could have existed on another planet and moved to Earth. The scientists concluded the paper saying the presence of structures of this type in any extra-terrestrial environment could be interpreted as unequivocal evidence of biology. The rock samples were collected immediately after a large meteorite disintegrated and crashed in the village of Araganwila in Sri Lanka on December 29, 2012. The scientific community, including Professor Francis Thackeray, the Institute for Human Evolution at the University of Wits welcomed the report as very exciting still too controversial, as samples could have been contaminated on Earth, the study was conducted reports.The Business Day by a group led by Chandra Wickramasinghe, director of the Center for Astrobiology Buckingham, University of Buckingham, who was also co-founder of the theory of Panspermia. The finding however is already under heavy criticism, with astronomers saying the meteorite looks more like a rock that could be found on Earth as the study provides vague details of the finding. Astronomer Phil Plait and professor wrote on his blog on Slate that chemical analysis presented no evidence that it is a carbonaceous chondrite, much less a meteorite, and that there is no reason to believe that what they have is a meteorite. Plait also quoted a professor of ecology and evolutionary biology Patrick Kociołek saying there was no sign that the diatoms illustrated in the study were fossilized material, and that most of them were species that represented a clear case of contamination of freshwater. Speaking with HuffingtonPost, study author did not deny that his team studied the meteorite freshwater species contained known Earth. But there was also at least half a dozen species of diatoms that specialists were not able to identify, said Wickramasinghe. He also addressed allegations that the meteorite could be a simple stone, saying that all the evidence had his group - which plans to publish - that have no doubt was a meteorite. If only ideas that are considered orthodox receive support through grants or publishing opportunities, it is certain that the progress of science will be stifled as it was during the Middle Ages, Wickramasinghe said.
Posted on: Fri, 21 Nov 2014 01:04:57 +0000

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