Why Indian red rains originated from Mars
Subject: Why Indian red rains originated from Mars
From: Wretch Fossil
Date: 30/07/2011, 17:16
Newsgroups: alt.sci.seti,sci.med

The red rains that have occurred in Kerala, India since 2001 did not
originate on Earth. They came from Mars via a comet. It takes a lot of
words to prove this. The following are basic reasons.

Why did they not originate on Earth? The reasons:

1.	The red rains mainly contained red blood cell remains (
http://wretchfossil.blogspot.com/2011/07/red-rain-in-india-did-contain-mammalian.html
). The red rains also contained small percentages of other material,
such as remains of platelets
http://wretchfossil.blogspot.com/2011/07/first-ever-martian-platelet-remains.html
), fat globules and fat cells
http://wretchfossil.blogspot.com/2011/07/fat-cell-and-fat-globule-remains-found.html
) ,as well as terrestrial spores of algae http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Red_rain_in_Kerala
.

2.	The red rains contained at least 50 tons of red particles
http://arxiv.org/PS_cache/astro-ph/pdf/0601/0601022v1.pdf . Judging
from the figures in the article by Godfrey Louis and A. Santhosh
Kumar, at least half of the red particles were blood cell remains.

3.	25 tons of blood cell remains could not be blown up to the clouds
all at once. Terrestrial blood cell remains exist mainly in fossils,
rocks, soils, bottoms of lakes or seas. Few of them suspend on the
surface of water, as they are heavier than water. Likewise, few of
them suspend in the air. It’s impossible for the wind to blow the
fossils/soils to the sky, sort out all the cellular remains and carry
only the remains of blood cells, platelets, and fat cells into the
clouds.

4.	The red rains did not mainly contain the terrestrial spores of
algae as concluded in the official report of the Indian government.
Bacteria and spores are all over the Earth. They can easily
contaminate rainwater. If you get samples of rainwater and cultivate
for spores or bacteria, you will probably grow many of them. That’s
how the Indian researchers got terrestrial spores in their official
report http://web.archive.org/web/20060613135746/http://www.geocities.com/iamgoddard/Sampath2001.pdf
. But everyone knows rock minerals and blood cell remains cannot be
cultivated and grown into large numbers for observation. Geologists
naturally find minerals. Botanists naturally find spores of algae,
lichen,fungi, etc.

Why were they from Mars?

1.	As explained above, they were not terrestrial material. So, they
must be extra terrestrial. The sources of the extraterrestrial
material are mainly meteorites and comets. Scientists agreed that
comets contain dirty ice. NASA’s Dr. Richard Hoover even discovered
microbial fossils in CI1 meteorites http://journalofcosmology.com/Life100.html
.

2.	As stated above, the red rains in India contained mammalian red
blood cell remains. That means there must be extraterrestrial mammals.
Besides Earth, Mars was the only place that could have produced
mammals in the solar system. I have proven that fossils are all over
Mars http://wretchfossil.blogspot.com/2009/10/proof-for-fossils-all-over-mars-edition.html
. I have also proven that most meteorites contain Martian fossils
http://wretchfossil.blogspot.com/2010/08/nearly-all-meteorites-displayed-on-ebay.html
. Mammals can never be produced on the sun, the asteroids, or other
planets, as mammals’ production requires a large area with Earth-like
environment, gravity, amiable temperature, flowing water, ecosystem,
etc.

3.	Martian mammalian red blood cell remains could be found in water
because all Martian mammals died out completely at the same time
(possibly from electric arc produced by universal lightning). Their
dead bodies bled blood. The blood of different animals mixed together
with sand and minerals. The blood cells and the fossils were preserved
on the cellular and molecular levels. Tissues and organs were fused
with sand and minerals. The preserved blood cells could be washed to
the lakes and oceans. Later, numerous Martian rocks and fossils,
including blood cell remains in the oceans, were somehow displaced
into the space and formed the Asteroid Belt, meteorites, and comets.
When Earth hit a comet, the dirty ice in the comet could deposit the
dirt—Martian mammalian red blood cell remains, etc.—in the clouds of
the Earth. That’s possibly the way it was.