(March 1, 2019 at 10:46 am)Gae Bolga Wrote: You tell us that god talks to you and that you've had brush-ins with the supernatural and think that anyone would care if you posted a picture of a ranchero?I , told you to google it to save yourself from trying to call a bluff I was not bluffing.: https://science.howstuffworks.com/life/e...-earth.htm
AND it list a peered reviewed paper you b-hole are no doubt completely unaware of despite how you spin it and lie about it... funny how it takes a man of faith to inform you your model of faith in evolution' is/has changed yet again!
Imagine a comet hurtling through the nothingness of space. It smashes into a planet, causing destruction — but also bringing life. That's because hitching a ride on the surface of the comet were tiny traces of organic material or even alien eggs, explaining how life could spread across the cosmos and arrive on our planet. Panspermia (meaning 'seeds everywhere') is the name of the theory that life on Earth may have cosmic origins, and it's been both debated by scientists and featured in works of science fiction.
Now, a group of nearly three dozen scientists from around the world are putting a tweak in the theory, suggesting not that Earth's earliest life has outer-space origins, but that panspermia may be responsible for the Cambrian explosion. That's a point in Earth's history approximately 541 million years ago when most major animal groups appear in the fossil record.
Now there is an objection via life or eggs or 'seeds' surviving radiation of space, the heat of reentry AND the question of how this material set up shop and thrived in an alien atmosphere/world.. This is the question that is ask before someone concludes a master engineer.
In the article "Cause of Cambrian Explosion — Terrestrial or Cosmic?" published in the August 2018 issue of the journal Progress in Biophysics and Molecular Biology, 33 scientists tie the rise of unique animals — tardigrades, octopuses, and the bevy of odd and unique animals that flourished at the time — to panspermia, suggesting that many of these relatively bizarre and never-before-seen creatures descend from organic alien material.
"It takes little imagination to consider that the pre-Cambrian mass extinction event(s) was correlated with the impact of a giant life-bearing comet (or comets), and the subsequent seeding of Earth with new cosmic-derived cellular organisms and viral genes," the authors write.
For those getting excited that a number of reputable scientists have cracked the mystery of life's origins, it's not so simple. This new paper isn't built on any new discoveries or research; it's a literature review that for the most part references the authors' own existing work. But that's by design, the authors acknowledge.
"We are acutely aware that mainstream thinking on the origin and further evolution of life on Earth is anchored firmly in the 'Terrestrial' paradigm," write the authors. "Our aim here is to facilitate further discussion in the biophysical, biomedical and evolutionary science communities."
did you see it sport? 33 scientist came together to write a paper saying that certain animals where seeded from extriestial organic "Alien material."