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Oumuamua May Have Dropped Sensors and Spores on Earth

Updated: Jul 3, 2021





A recent article from Scientific American suggested that Oumuamua might be a spacecraft and that it could respond to sensors dropped by its extraterrestial UAP.


If Oumuamua flies through space as an interstellar spacecraft from an advanced civilization, another possibility is that Oumuamua spread both sensors and living spores directly from the craft in multiple directions, inluding towards earth. Such spores could include bacteria and viruses that would be consistently packaged and distributed towards planets hospitable to life.


NOT SO FARFETCHED


The most profound questions ever to be asked by Humans have been related to our origins on Earth. Unfortunately, answers, often illogical and without evidence, are most often in the form of a self-serving myth. However, “intelligent design,” without the help of a “God,” but from ETs, now deserves much more attention..

It wasn’t until the middle of the 19th century that Charles Darwin published On the Origin of Species in 1859, suggesting that, rather than an act of creation by an unknowable God, life systematically evolved. Finally, science offered a viable and testable alternative explanation. Evidence for evolution occurred everywhere, but the origination of life still posed a mystery—perhaps the greatest mystery of all. We seem to know much more about how our universe started with the Big Bang than we do about exactly how the first life came about on Earth.

Genes would not be discovered until seven years later by Mendel and DNA a few years after Swiss chemist Friedrich Miescher. OK, life evolves, but how did it all start? Darwin once suggested that some little warm pond near the ocean was a likely spot, far from an adequate explanation. Modern theorists propose hydrothermal vents.

I selected Francis Crick’s Life Itself to update, summarize, and expand because he promoted the idea that DNA did not first evolve on Earth. If true, DNA’s alien origin would be one of the most important realizations in all Human history. Life, according to Crick, began somewhere else where conditions were more favorable and, with the help of advanced intelligence, seeded Earth through panspermic, “seeds everywhere,” events. This has been labeled as the “seeded hypothesis.”

If DNA originated elsewhere, it reflects not only upon our beginnings as a form of alien hybrid but also our future, which may include merging with one or more advanced civilizations. We may, indeed, one day, meet our “makers,” or at least some of their descendants.

Crick’s insight and intuition are now confirmed by convincing scientific evidence from a prominent mathematician and astrophysicist. They published a paper in 2013 in a peer-reviewed journal named Icarus, formerly edited by Carl Sagan. Icarus just happens to be the same journal that published Crick's paper over three decades earlier elaborating on the possibilities of Directed Panspermia by advanced civilizations.

When one of the co-discoverers of the structure of DNA claims it is of interstellar origin, we have to listen to why he believes it is so, as explained in his book Life Itself. The evidence to support his claims is mounting. First, DNA is an elegant mathematical and signature construct--which means it is artificial. Second, an ancestor of our giant viruses prove to be the most likely Last Universal Common Ancestor or LUCA. It has remnants of DNA machinery making it, along with its huge genome, quite “alien.” Third, the United States government reveals more and more about UFOs or UAPs (Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon) sightings and materials associated with them.

This ebook summarizes Crick’s work which previously could only be found, to the best of my knowledge, in printed form, adds the evidence of signatures and hidden mathematical and pictorial codes from DNA for his theory, offers general updates on cosmological data that Crick did not have at his disposal, addresses the subject of the surprising Last Universal Common Ancestor for life, and briefly explores our government’s about-face on the subject of Unidentified Aerial Phenomenon (UAP) and bizarre materials found at their crash sites which they admit having and examining.


NOBEL PRIZE


In 1962, Francis Crick shared the Nobel Prize in Physiology and Medicine for the remarkable 1953 discovery of DNA’s molecular structure, a task that evaded other prominent scientists in the race, such as Linus Pauling.

Crick stood as one of the most knowledgeable scientists in the world concerning the structure and function of DNA but surprised everyone with a controversial and mind-boggling conclusion that DNA proved to be too complex, too well-organized and logical, too powerful, and just too perfect to be fashioned from natural selection. Furthermore, he stated that it did not likely originate on Earth but instead arose from intelligent design, not by the Christian God, but through advanced engineering from an alien civilization billions of years ago. DNA, according to Crick, reached Earth through a process called directed panspermia.

Stirring up a potpourri of questions about our very existence and the nature of life, Crick’s elaboration on Directed Panspermia bears implications not only for life’s origins on Earth but also for Humanity’s future. First, he addresses the probability of intelligent life elsewhere. Second, he sparks a debate about whether we, in turn, should be directed panspermists trying to spread our version of the genetic code about the universe.

Crick imagined unmanned rockets with cargoes of primitive spores organized into life by DNA that included planet Earth as a potential landing and seeding site. DNA could also have hitched a ride on such heavenly bodies as meteors or comets. For example, the famous Murchison meteor that hit Australia in 1969 had dozens of organic compounds, including amino acids, and revealed its age at over seven billion years.

Survival of the journey, impacting Earth, and surviving and evolving, are all addressed by Crick. He describes the Big Bang and the nature and expanse of the universe in determining an estimate of the chances that life exists elsewhere.

If Crick proves to be correct, then the same seeds could have spawned life on many planets. These life forms on other planets could have given rise to “brothers, sisters, and cousins.” Perhaps timely visits by the engineers to those planets which had an atmosphere with oxygen, bore life, to tweak life further towards advanced intelligence in preparation for eventually increased hybridization would be a good Darwinian strategy to spread one’s civilization and genes armed with viable adaptation strategies already in place.

One rather disturbing possibility for pure humanists and religious folk alike, not considered by Crick, is that DNA arose from alien artificial intelligence's design and propagation efforts.










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