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06 March 2011

NASA scientist finds 'worm-like alien life form in meteorite'

NASA performance of the WC so far


London, Mar 6 (ANI): Maybe this is what an alien really looks like - worm-like bacteria.
NASA scientist Dr Richard Hoover claims to own found life kind, which can make a case for how life on earth started and what is a lot of, he challenges anyone to come back forth and disprove his claim.

An astrobiologist with Nasa's Marshall area Flight Center, Hoover explains that travelling to Antarctica, Siberia and Alaska he has studied a particularly rare style of meteorites - CI1 carbonaceous chondrites - of that solely 9 are known to exist on earth.

Under microscopes, these meteorites showed varied totally different fossils of bacteria - some that are the same as ones on earth and others that are well, alien.

According to him, life on earth might are planted by bacteria in an asteroid hitting the world in its infancy.

In one case he found on a meteorite an organism similar in size and overall structure to the enormous bacterium Titanospirillum velox, an organism found here on planet Earth.

"I interpret it as indicating that life is a lot of broadly distributed than restricted strictly to the world earth," the Daily Mail quoted him as telling Fox News.

"The exciting issue is that they [the bacteria] are in several cases recognisable and might be associated terribly closely with the generic species here on earth," he said.

He added, "There are some that are simply terribly strange and do not appear as if something that i have been ready to establish, and i have shown them to several different specialists that have additionally return up stumped."

In one amongst the remains, Hoover found no nitrogen.

"If somebody will make a case for how it's potential to own a biological stay that has no nitrogen, or nitrogen below the detect ability limits that I even have, during a time amount as short as one hundred fifty years, then i might be terribly curious about hearing that," he said.

"I've talked with several scientists regarding this and nobody has been ready to make a case for."

Dr Rudy Schild, editor-in-chief of the journal Cosmology, said, "Given the controversial nature of his discovery, we've got invited a hundred specialists and have issued a general invite to over five,000 scientists from the scientific community to review the paper and to supply their vital analysis."

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