| Subject: Re: Nearly every meteorite displayed on Ebay USA contains Martian mammalian fossils |
| From: Wretch Fossil |
| Date: 18/08/2010, 07:00 |
On 7月18日, 下午4時53分, Wretch Fossil <wretchfos...@gmail.com> wrote:
Nearly every meteorite displayed on Ebay USA contains Martian
mammalian fossils.
Experts cannot believe the king was really naked.
Can you not recognize a fossilized blood vessel under a
stereomicroscope-like digital microscope? The total expense for doing
this is no more than US$150, as calculated below:
A meteorite costs you less than US$50, including shipping
charges (Don't buy meteorites less than US$15, as they could be too
small to find Martian mammalian fossils).
A digital microscope costs you less than US$100 on EBay, including
shipping charges. Such a digital microscope will give you nearly 3-
dimensional view of blood vessel details at 60X and 200X, plus
capability to measure blood vessels' diameters and other details down
to 0.1 micron.
Iron meteorites contain more obvious fossils than other kinds of
meteorites. If you buy from an IMCA member, you can rest assured your
meteorite is genuine.
I trust you can recognize a fossilized blood vessel,
have US$150, are not too cowardly to say the king was naked.
Sorry, here are the reasons:
1. I purchased about 100 meteorites from the auction site of Yahoo
Taiwan.
The meteorites were found in China, but every one of them contains
fossils, especially fossilized mammalian red blood cells such as those
shown in the following micrographs:
http://www.wretch.cc/album/show.php?i=lin440315&b=25&f=1691601080&p=158
http://www.wretch.cc/album/show.php?i=lin440315&b=25&f=1691601081&p=159
2. The fossilized red blood cells belonged to mammals, because they
were round and concave, measuring between three and eight micrometers
in diameters. No other animals except mammals possess this kind of
cells. My following article explains in details why this feature
(round and concave cells) can be used to recognize mammals:http://wretchfossil.blogspot.com/2010/03/pennsylvanian-anthracite-con...
3. There have been billions of meteorites that fell from the sky
since 1 billion years ago at the latest. Statistics show every day at
least one meteorite falls down to Planet Earth. Billions of ET mammal
fossils means over millions of mammals lived somewhere
extraterrestrial. They could not have lived on a small asteroid of a
few kilometers in diameter. The only possible origin of those mammals
was Mars.
Recommended products:
If you cannot find the right meteorites/digital microscope on Ebay,
here are some for your easy reference, as I found it torturous to find
the right things:
(Meteorites)http://shop.ebay.com/i.html?LH_BIN=1&_trkparms=65%253A15%257C66%253A2...
Above link is good for only a few days.
You can also search “carved meteorites” on Ebay to find the products.
Please note tektites are not meteorites.
Digital microscope:http://cgi.ebay.com/Dino-Lite-AM413T-USB-Digital-Microscope-10x-200X-...
Above link is good for only a few days.
To find the product, you may also search “AM413T Dino Lite digital
microscope” on Ebay USA.
Correction on Aug. 17:
Over 14,600 billion tons of meteorites fell to earth in history
The figure was calculated as follows:
1. Every day 100 to 1,000 tons of meteorites are estimated to have
fallen to Earth surface (note 1).
2. Meteorites began to fall to the Earth at least 400 million years
ago (note 2).
3. 100 tons (lowest estimate) X 365 days X 400 million years = 14,600
billion tons
Note 1:
Estimates of the present-day flux of meteorites vary over four orders
of magnitude, but most range from 100 to 1000 metric tons of
meteorites per day for the whole of the Earth's surface, about 1% of
which is recoverable "macro"- meteorites (Parkin and Tiles, 1968;
Ceplecha, 1992).
Source: See third paragraph in
http://www.meteorite.com/psu_summary.htm
Note 2:
Thorslund and Wickman (1981) described a chondrite found in Middle
Ordovician limestone from Brunflo, central Sweden, and Nyström, et al.
(1988) reported a second chondrite from Ordovician limestones in the
Österplana quarry at Kinnekulle, southern Sweden.
Source: See line 20 in the above link