| Subject: Re: Martian fossils chemically differ from Earthly fossils |
| From: Wretch Fossil |
| Date: 31/08/2010, 09:19 |
| Newsgroups: sci.skeptic,alt.sci.seti |
On 8月30日, 下午4時15分, Wretch Fossil <wretchfos...@gmail.com> wrote:
Martian fossils chemically differ from Earthly fossils
I know almost nothing about chemistry, but I do know that Martian
fossils, as manifested in meteorites, are chemically different from
Earthly fossils.
The difference is seen in the difference between meteorites and
Earthly fossils. For example:
1. Many Martian fossils are magnetic, as meteorites are magnetic.
Earthly fossils are not magnetic.
2. Some Martian fossils (namely, meteorites) contain elements and
alloy rarely seen on Earth. Iron-nickel alloy is not seen in Earthly
fossils. The following chemical test reports show some elements unseen
in Earthly fossils:
http://www.wretch.cc/album/show.php?i=lin440315&b=25&f=1691351006&p=48
http://www.wretch.cc/album/show.php?i=lin440315&b=25&f=o1691361022.jp...
The morphological structure of Martian fossils are identical to
Earthly fossils on the cell/tissue levels at the least. The chemistry
of Martian fossils is different from that of Earthly fossils, not only
because they are of different ages (3-billion-year-old Martian fossils
versus 300-million-year-old Earthly fossils of Mr. Ed Conrad), but
also because they were preserved by different methods.Moreover,
fossils presently on Mars surface died in a way different from Earthly
fossils.
So, no wonder NASA could not find past life on Mars by chemical means.
Added on Aug. 31, 2010:
My American friend (Not Ed) wrote to me :
Quote:
By the way, a neurologist locally, looked at an image I have printed
off, of the Martian blood, did not know it was from a Martian rock,
and immediately and emphatically told me it was definitely blood.
I asked him if he was sure, and he said," yes, I'm sure, that is
blood."
I can't quote a name, because at the present time, he won't even let
me use his name for my project, even though he is has already examined
it, and is setting up a meeting with a Neuro Radiologist for
examination.
I hope all is well with you.
Unquote
The point here is: You can do the same thing to produce your own
Martian blood by choosing a meteorite that is mostly or partially red
on its exterior, collect its saw dust (while carving or cutting it) in
a container and add water to it. That's it.