Blood Red Rain in Kerala of Extraterrestrial Origin

By Angsuman Chakraborty, Gaea News Network
Friday, March 10, 2006

Blood-red colored rain fell over Kerala on July 25, 2001. It continued for two months, raining crimson, turning clothes pink, burning leaves on trees. In some places, the rain fell in scarlet sheets. Its extraterrestrial origin is now being accepted in international circles.

Scientists at that time concluded that the rain was red because winds had swept up dust from Arabia and dumped it on Kerala.

Dr Godfrey Louis, a Reader in Physics at the School of Pure and Applied Physics at the Mahatma Gandhi University in Kottayam, Kerala, disagreed. He diligently gathered rain samples and, after months of painstaking research, concluded: ‘The red particles, which caused the red rain of Kerala, are of extraterrestrial origin.’

His scientific conclusions have now received international support. Dr Milton Wainwright of the micro-biology Department at Sheffield University in Britain has been examining some of the particles of the red rain samples that hit Kerala. And he has come out in support of Dr Louis’ theory that the rains could belong to an alien life form.

New Scientist Magazine, in its March cover story, has published the red rain phenomenon along with the doctor’s theory.

The key findings are:

  1. The phenomenon can be explained easily if it is assumed that the origin of the red particles is from cometary fragments, which underwent atmospheric disintegration above Kerala.
  2. There is additional correlating evidences that prompts this line of thinking, like the sonic boom from the meteor airburst, which preceded the first red rain case. Having made a logical possibility like this, it follows that the cometary body in question should contain a huge quantity of these red particles, which amounts to an estimated quantity of more than 50,000 kg.
  3. What makes this finding most important is the biological cell-like nature of the particles. Under an optical microscope, they appear like biological cells. Transmission Electron Microscopy further shows a clear cell structure (Image above). Their organic nature is indicated by the major presence of carbon and oxygen. But, despite these biological indications, the cells do not show the presence of DNA. The genetic molecule DNA is present in all living organisms found on Earth, so the absence of DNA argues against the biological nature of these cells.
  4. There is thus the possibility of alternate biomolecules in these cells, whose origin is suspected as extraterrestrial. This way, the cells may represent an alternate form of life from space. If these are such biological cells, then their production in huge quantity inside cometary bodies can be explained by the theory of cometary panspermia.

But, what if these new scientific ideas are wrong? Dr Louis says that, if they are, he wants a better explanation for the phenomenon and the strange nature of the cells. “If these cells have a terrestrial origin, then it follows that they exist in huge quantities in some part of the Earth and are sure to have been noticed by some microbiologists. But there appears to be no such identification so far,” he says.

Dr Louis’ theory was initially ridiculed, but has now been accepted for research by international scientists like Dr Wainwright. His research has also been accepted for publication in the reputed international journal Astrophysics and Space Science. He is soon gearing up to publish the next set of results and conduct several collaborative studies to further unravel the mystery of the cells.

Source: Rediff

Is this the first wave of acceptance of extraterrestrial life-forms?

Filed under: Headline News, India, Science

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Discussion

David Pollard
September 5, 2006: 4:15 pm

It seems rather more likely that the red raindust was the product of incomplete incineration of chemical waste at the Eloor industrial zone.

The pattern of fallout fits with the prevailing winds. The elemental analysis matches what might be expected for a core of partly burnt pesticide waste around which microparticles of fly-ash or clay coalesced as the incinerator plume cooled. As for ‘reproduction’, check out the work of Jack Szostak and colleagues on physical replication of vesicles which is enhanced in the prescence of clay.

March 13, 2006: 2:03 am

[...] Angsuman discovered an article which suggests that the red rain over Kerala was of extraterrestrial origin. [...]

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