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      New biology of red rain extremophiles prove cometary panspermia

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          Abstract

          This paper reports the extraordinary biology of the microorganisms from the mysterious red rain of Kerala, India. These chemosynthetic organisms grow optimally at an extreme high temperature of 300 degrees C in hydrothermal conditions and can metabolize inorganic and organic compounds including hydrocarbons. Stages found in their life cycle show reproduction by a special multiple fission process and the red cells found in the red rain are identified as the resting spores of these microbes. While these extreme hyperthermophiles contain proteins, our study shows the absence of DNA in these organisms, indicating a new primitive domain of life with alternate thermostable genetics. This new biology proves our earlier hypothesis that these microbes are of extraterrestrial origin and also supports our earlier argument that the mysterious red rain of Kerala is due to the cometary delivery of the red spores into the stratosphere above Kerala.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          29 December 2003
          Article
          astro-ph/0312639
          c6711d70-de68-44c6-999e-3bc61bdffaa6
          History
          Custom metadata
          17 pages, 6 figures, see related paper astro-ph/0310120
          astro-ph

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