by Amelia Gentleman and Robin
McKie
The liquid looks
cloudy and uninteresting. Yet, if one group of scientists is
correct, the phial contains the first samples of extraterrestrial
life isolated by researchers.
district of western India. And these rain bursts continued for the next two months. All along the coast it rained crimson, turning local people's clothes pink, burning leaves on trees and falling as scarlet sheets at some points.
Instead Louis decided that the rain was
made up of bacteria-like material that had been swept to Earth from
a passing comet. In short, it rained aliens over India during the
summer of 2001.
Milton Wainwright, a microbiologist at Sheffield, is now testing samples of Kerala's red rain.
Critical to Louis's theory is the length of time the red rain fell on Kerala.
Two months is too long for it to have been wind-borne dust, he says. In addition, one analysis showed the particles were 50 per cent carbon, 45 per cent oxygen with traces of sodium and iron: consistent with biological material. Louis also discovered that, hours before the first red rain fell, there was a loud sonic boom that shook houses in Kerala.
Only an incoming meteorite could have triggered such a blast, he claims. This had broken from a passing comet and shot towards the coast, shedding microbes as it travelled. These then mixed with clouds and fell with the rain. Many scientists accept that comets may be rich in organic chemicals and a few, such as the late Fred Hoyle, the UK theorist, argued that life on Earth evolved from microbes that had been brought here on comets.
But most researchers say
that Louis is making too great a leap in connecting his rain
with microbes from a comet.
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