[meteorite-list] We are the Aliens.

Linton Rohr lintonius at earthlink.net
Mon Nov 7 14:37:50 EST 2011


Well, it may or may not fit in the “life as we know it” category,
but there’s got to be *something* out there.
Great photo, Eric!
Linton

----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Eric Wichman" <eric at meteoritesusa.com>
To: <meteorite-list at meteoritecentral.com>
Sent: Saturday, November 05, 2011 10:18 PM
Subject: Re: [meteorite-list] We are the Aliens.


> My thoughts...
>
> Wrote this almost a year ago:
> http://www.meteoritesusa.com/meteorite-news/we-are-aliens/
>
> Eric
>
>
> On 11/5/2011 10:41 PM, Count Deiro wrote:
>> For some time now I have postulated that we human beings are, in fact, 
>> the aliens in this solar system. We came into this system at its 
>> formation and, using the same cosmic material, evolved into an organism 
>> that contains a consciousness that is inexplicable and apparently cannot 
>> be replicated in any other life form but ours which now dominates this 
>> system entirely.
>>
>> Here are a few words attributed to NASA (Alief/Live Leak/author unknown)
>>
>> "Whether or not you believe in life outside of our solar system, the
>> fact that we are all here means that the stuff we're made of must have
>> come from somewhere. After studying meteorites and discovering
>> ready-made components of DNA present, NASA has concluded that the
>> building blocks of life as we know it may have crashed down on Earth
>> from above.
>>
>> Researchers at the Goddard Space Flight Center discovered portions of
>> DNA on chunks of crashed space rock in both Antarctica and Australia.
>> The extraterrestrial visitors contained various types of nucleobases, 
>> which
>> are thought to be essential in the creation of DNA, and life in general. 
>> The
>> scientists were able to isolate the compounds and prove that they weren't
>> created here on Earth. This was particularly important, as critics often 
>> cite
>> contamination as the reason for these compounds appearing on meteorites
>> that have been studied in the past.
>>
>> The team also concluded that certain space rocks — depending on their
>> makeup and speed — work like manufacturing facilities for these
>> biological precursors. The implications of the discovery are 
>> far-reaching,
>> and suggest that humanity may owe its existence to a well-placed 
>> meteorite
>> in the early days of the Earth, and that without it the planet might be a 
>> rocky,
>> watery wasteland."
>>
>> I believe the term "Panspermia" is used in cosmology as a label for this 
>> hypothesis. Panspermia, however, doesn't include the proposition that we 
>> conscious laden beings came from somewhere else in the galaxy arriving 
>> with the Nebula.
>>
>> Thoughts,
>>
>> Count Deiro
>> IMCA 3536 MetSoc
>>
>>
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