---
F R E N D Z  of martian
---

Well I don't know about you lot...

martian

----------  Forwarded Message  ----------
Subject: IMAGES: Could it be that we're all from Mars?
Date: Mon, 9 Aug 1999 14:39:50 -0700
From: "Steve Wingate" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>


->  Anomalous Images  Mailing List

Could it be that we're all from Mars?  

Southam Newspapers; The Ottawa Citizen  

Science fiction's most dire predictions -- that beings from another planet 
might take over the Earth -- may have already come true. It just may be that 
the invasion and colonization of Earth by Martian life forms has already 
happened.  

According to world-renowned British physicist Paul Davies, it is entirely 
plausible that all life on our planet has its origins on Mars.  

"Not only is it possible, but I think there's a good case to be made that we 
are," he said.  

Davies -- the 1995 winner of the $1-million US Templeton Prize, the world's 
largest award for intellectual endeavour -- spoke Friday at the annual 
Couchiching Conference. This year's theme is "Science, Ethics and 
Human Destiny."  

It has been three years since the discovery of a meteorite from Mars that 
contained what appeared to be the fossil record of tiny microbial life forms 
which live, or once lived, on the red planet. Since then, Davies has been 
studying the idea of migration of living matter from one planet to another, 
specifically between Mars and Earth.  

He believes, for two reasons, that some form of bio-exchange has 
occurred. First, how it would be transmitted is now clear: when an asteroid 
hits a planet, fragments fly into the air and are carried away with enough 
speed to leave the atmosphere. Because of this, he says, "there is no 
question that there has been an exchange of rock between the two 
planets."  

The second idea is the discovery that primitive microbes live deep within 
the rocky crust of the Earth, in extreme heat and without benefit of sunlight 
or organic matter on which to feed. The fact that rock can support life 
means that asteroids are a viable means of travel between planets.  

"I believe that past life on Mars was a virtual certainty," Davies writes in his 
book, The Fifth Miracle: The Search for the Origin and Meaning of Life.  

Yet, even if this is true, Davies said it would be impossible to determine 
with certainty which of the two planets is "the true Garden of Eden."  

It is also possible that life sprung up independently on each planet.  

Davies does note, however, that specialists believe that if one of the 
planets was the original colonizer, it is much more likely, due to the makeup 
of the planets, that Mars was the first to give life to matter.  

"Then life on Earth," according to Mr. Davies, "could originally have come 
from Mars, and we would all be descended from Martians."  

------------------------------------------------------------------------
Steve Wingate

California Director
SKYWATCH INTERNATIONAL

Anomalous Images and UFO Files
http://www.anomalous-images.com


 ---------------------------------------------------------------------------

 Anomalous Images and UFO Files: http://www.anomalous-images.com

-> Send "subscribe anomalous-images " to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
->  Posted by: "Steve Wingate" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
--

        Linux. May the source be with you.



--
Sent to you via the frendz list at marsbard.com

The archive is at http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/

Reply via email to