Scientist finds proof of 'alien life' in meteorite?
Top Stories
- UPA II report card: Govt flaunts stricter rape law, remains silent on graft
- CSK team principal: Avid golfer, fast car lover, married to cricket
- British soldier hacked to death in suspected Islamist attack
- Top Lashkar militant Hilal Molvi killed in Kashmir encounter
- Sanjay Dutt's life at Yerwada begins as prisoner number 16656

A lump of rock which crash-landed on Earth in a meteorite shower may hold evidence of 'alien life' within it, a leading UK scientist has claimed.
The two-inch wide lump of space rock, that fell in central Sri Lanka in December, is pitted with microscopic seaweed fossils similar to those found on Earth, said Professor Chandra Wickramasinghe, former head of Cardiff University's Centre for Astrobiology.
"These finds are crushing evidence that human life started from outside our Earth," said Wickramasinghe, who is controversial for his theories that life on Earth 'seeded' from the outer space, the 'Daily Mail' reported.
"We are all aliens - we share a cosmic ancestry. Each time a new planetary system forms a few surviving microbes find their way into comets," he said.
"These then multiply and seed other planets. These latest finds are just more evidence to point to the overwhelming fact that life on Earth began on other worlds.
"Our provisional assessment is that it was part of a comet," Wickramasinghe said.
"The stones look extremely unusual, and have a porous structure, with a lower density than anything we have on Earth," he said.
Wickramasinghe's claims are outlined in a freely accessible paper on the website of the Journal of Cosmology.
It says "a few per cent carbon as revealed by analysis confirms the status of a carbonaceous meteorite".
However, he admits that key tests to prove the rock is an uncontaminated meteorite are yet to have been carried out.
However, many experts have already dismissed his claims as "laughable" and argued that the apparent extra-terrestrial fossils are clearly present as the result of contamination on Earth.
They point out that it has yet to be proven that the rock is actually from space at all.
Wickramasinghe's research alleges that "microscopic fossilised diatoms (a basic form of algae) were found in the sample".
... contd.
Editors’ Pick
- Paddy shortfall blamed for mystery death of procurement officer
- 'Bookie' Vindoo was close to BCCI chief's son-in-law: cops
- Spot-fixing probe widens, Delhi top cop says 3 more players are under scanner
- British soldier hacked to death in suspected Islamist attack
- Malegaon 2006 case: NIA names four right wing terror suspects
- BJP invokes 'sarcasm, ridicule' against PM
- Nine years on, Sonia, PM put up show of unity, Singh hints at unfinished business


Lab-created human brain cells grow in mice
Mars Curiosity rover back to work after break
Tata group to launch Croma 3G tablets in next 2 weeks
Baboons understand numbers like humans




















