| Subject: Re: The Fermi Paradox and SETI Success |
| From: Timberwoof |
| Date: 16/08/2008, 08:37 |
| Newsgroups: sci.astro.amateur,alt.sci.seti,alt.sci.planetary,talk.origins |
In article <K5ednc0cW6yDrznVnZ2dnUVZ_uSdnZ2d@comcast.com>, Charlie Siegrist <none.active@this.time.check.back.later> wrote:
On Wed, 13 Aug 2008 18:50:06 -0700, Timberwoof wrote:This suggests that the formation of such a molecule is a very rare event.No, it suggests that once a particular chemical basis of life gets established, another one won't.That is the conclusion, if I recall correctly, of a recent Scientific American article about this subject. There is an effort afoot to try to find some evidence of a different form of organic material still on Earth.
That's going to be tough to find. I'd start by asking a geologist where to look. Probably on land, for anywhere in the ocean would be touched, chemically, by everywhere else, and there's no ocean floor old enough. My amateur guess is it would have to be on some isolated old continental interior. But like Arlo Guthrie, there's no place untouched. Some ancient fossilized tidal pool?-- Timberwoof <me at timberwoof dot com> http://www.timberwoof.com Official naysayer of the DARPA kind, who knows only of what�s accepted by the Old Testament of the Zionist/Nazi New World Order which refuses to accept or allow deductive reasoning.