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#1 |
Avalon Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: U.K.
Posts: 3,380
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http://www.unknowncountry.com/media/
Valentine's Special: Love and Well-Being February 14, 2009 Our resident psychic medium Marla Frees is an expert on the relationship between psychic energy and physical well-being, and here she interviews on of the great masters of just how energetic principles relate to our overall health and spiritual growth. 1 Hour in Linda Moulton-Howe speaks to the Indian,Kerala red rain scientist who's performed various extreme tests on the red rain that was gathered after it fell over Kerala a few years ago-he deduced it's of extra terrestrial origin;will the scientific community take his papers seriously? |
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#2 |
Avalon Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: planet earth currently
Posts: 319
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thank you for posting this! i have been patiently waiting for this info to come out.
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#3 |
Avalon Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: U.K.
Posts: 3,380
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You're welcome-i feel that the scientific doctrine finds revelations in science hard to deal with as certain discoveries often don't fit their neat little models.
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#4 |
Avalon Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: So. Cal. U.S.
Posts: 4,205
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![]() ![]() ![]() Rain water sample (left) and after the particles settled (right). Dried sediment (center). From July 25 to September 23, 2001, red rain sporadically fell on the southern Indian state of Kerala. Heavy downpours occurred in which red-colored rain fell, staining clothes with an appearance similar to that of blood. People reported yellow, green, and black rain also. Initially, scientists suspected that fallout from a hypothetical meteor burst colored the rains, but a study commissioned by the Government of India found that the rains had been colored by airborne spores from a locally prolific terrestrial alga. Then in early 2006, the colored rains of Kerala suddenly rose to worldwide attention after media reports of a conjecture that the colored particles constituted extraterrestrial cells, proposed by Godfrey Louis and Santhosh Kumar of the Mahatma Gandhi University in Kottayam. An investigation into the isotopic ratios of nitrogen and carbon supported the terrestrial origins of the solid material in the red rain. The unexplained nature of the red rain phenomena in Kerela has led to speculation of a dramatic sort. Some have postulated that the red rain constitutes a form of hypothetical microorganism called panspermia. The few scientist who advance the theory of panspermia postulate that those mircoorganisms began life on earth and throughout the universe, denoting an explanation for the origin of life called the proto-domain theory. As long as an explanation of the red rain phenomenon remains unexplained, theories outside the mainstream like the prot-domain theory will continue to have a following. http://www.newworldencyclopedia.org/...rain_in_Kerala ![]() ![]() http://www.daviddarling.info/encyclo...of_Kerala.html |
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#5 |
Avalon Senior Member
Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: So. Cal. U.S.
Posts: 4,205
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Here's a link that kind of explains it in a different way.....
http://users.erols.com/igoddard/redrain.htm |
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