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Old 03-20-2009, 02:25 AM   #4
J_rod7
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Join Date: Sep 2008
Location: Florida, USA
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Cool Re: New Microorganisms Discovered In Earth's Stratosphere

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Oh yes, Transpermia is proven again.

[ "Many microorganisms stand up surprisingly well to the space environment. Subjected to high vacuum, some bacteria quickly dehydrate and enter a state of suspended animation from which they are readily revived by contact with water and nutrients. Medical laboratories routinely use high vacuums for preservation of bacteria. Viable microorganisms were recovered from pans of the Surveyor 3 camera system after three years exposure to the lunar environment. However, these instances of preservation have only been tested over times approaching decades, not over the tens to hundreds of millions of years necessary for interplanetary travel.

[ "Nature, however, has been kind enough to give us several instances of really long-term preservation of viable microorganisms. Chris McKay of NASA Ames Research Center has extracted microorganisms preserved for perhaps as long as 3 million years from deep cores in the Siberian permafrost. Even more impressive is the discovery of bacteria that were preserved for some 255 million years in salt beds of Permian age discovered at a site in New Mexico. Dehydrated by contact with salt and protected from radiation by the salt's low content of radioactive elements, these ancient bacteria demonstrated their viability by causing the decay of fish that had been packed with the salt." ] ---
--- Source: http://users.tpg.com.au/users/tps-seti/swaprock.html

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The conventional thinking is that rocks blasted off Mars or another planet which had earlier life, brought life in turn to Earth.

But let's consider PRIOR HISTORY, before the birth of our Solar system. Our Star, we call Sol, is a THIRD-GENERATION STAR in this Galaxy. "Clasical" astrophysics tell us the age of our Star system to be around 4.8-Billion Years, and the age of the Galaxy we live in to be around 12- to 14-Billion Years. Two generations of Stars have preceded our sun.

The Fusion reaction inside a star starts with Hydrogen, and creates all the elements up to Iron by internal fusion. All elements heavier than Iron can only be created in the blast reactions of a star which goes NOVA. These elements are dispersed into the compression of further clouds of Hydrogen and some helium, which condense into new stars and planets. Several (2 - 3, possibly more) NOVA stars contributed to seed the H/He cloud of our system

Also recent spectrographic analysis looking through the space towards the Galactic Center reveals a very rich soup of organic compounds. These compounds, along with fragments of planets with previous life-forms - blasted throughout space when THEIR STARS went NOVA - all became seeded to all newly formed Solar systems. So by Transpermia, Life here on Earth (& wherever else in our system) comes here from many Vectors. This process repeated millions of times throughout our Galaxy.

And also, an uncountable many Trillions of times in all the great number of Galaxies of the Universe.

Now, who asked IF there is life, other than here under our noses?

Quod Erat Demonstrandum.

BTW, Alys, those Planes spraying the chemtrails can't get up more than about half-way to the lowest sample altitude of the balloon.

Good Nite, Sleep Tite.

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