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EVIDENCE OF LIVING BACTERIA COMING FROM COMETS

Evidence of living bacterial cells entering the Earth's upper atmosphere from space has come from a joint project involving Indian and UK scientists. The first positive identification of extraterrestrial microbial life is to be reported on 30 July 2001 at the Astrobiology session of the 46th Annual SPIE meeting in San Diego by Professor Chandra Wickramasinghe of Cardiff University, on behalf of an international team led by Professor Jayant Narlikar, Director of the Inter-Universities Centre for Astronomy and Astrophysics in Pune, India. Samples of stratospheric air were collected on January 21st under the most stringent aseptic conditions by Indian scientists using ISRO's cryogenic sampler payload flown on balloons from the TATA Institute Balloon Launching facility in Hyderabad. Part of the samples sent to Cardiff were analysed by a team at Cardiff University led by Professor David Lloyd and assisted by Melanie Harris. There is now unambiguous evidence for the presence of clumps of living cells in air samples from as high as 41 kilometres, well above the local tropopause (16 km), above which no air from lower down would normally be transported. The detection was made using a fluorescent cyanine dye which is only taken up by the membranes of living cells. (See Figure above) The variation with height of the distribution of such cells indicates strongly that the clumps of bacterial cells are falling from space. The daily input of such biological material is provisionally estimated as about one third of a tonne over the entire planet.

This new evidence provides strong support for the Panspermia theory of Sir Fred Hoyle and Chandra Wickramasinghe. These scientists have argued for over 2 decades that terrestrial life was brought down to Earth by comets and that cometary material containing microorganisms must still be reaching us in large quantities.

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