Cosmic Womb: The Seeding of Planet Earth

Cosmic Womb: The Seeding of Planet Earth

Cosmic Womb: The Seeding of Planet Earth

Cosmic Womb: The Seeding of Planet Earth

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Overview

Compelling evidence that life, intelligence, and evolution on Earth were seeded by comets and cosmic intelligence

• Explains how life first came from interstellar dust and comets and how later arrivals of cosmic dust and comets spurred evolution

• Explores the possibility that universal knowledge may be stored in human DNA and how ancient cultures may have known a way to retrieve this knowledge

• Reveals new discoveries about the dimensions of the Great Pyramid of Giza

All ancient cultures link humanity’s origins to the heavens. The Egyptians, for example, were adamant that their ancestors came from the stars of Orion and Sirius. Today, however, religion and science assert that life arose spontaneously here on Earth. Did the ancients know our true cosmic origins? Have they left us clues?

Expanding on the panspermia theory developed with the celebrated astronomer Sir Fred Hoyle—namely that the building blocks of life were imported to Earth by comets in the distant past—Chandra Wickramasinghe and Robert Bauval explore the latest findings in support of a cosmic origin for humanity. They detail the astrobiological discoveries of organic molecules deep in space, how microbes are incredibly resistant to the harshest conditions of space—enabling the transfer of genes from one star system to another, and the recent recovery of microorganisms from comets still in space. They argue that the universe was “born” and preset with the blueprint of life and that the cosmos must be teeming with lifeforms far older and perhaps far more developed than us. They show how life arrived on our planet in the form of interstellar dust containing alien bacteria approximately 3.8 billion years ago and how later comets, meteoroids, and asteroids brought new bacterial and viral genetic material, which was vital for evolution.

Using the latest advances in physics, cosmology, and neuroscience, the authors explore how universal knowledge may be stored in human DNA and cells, and they postulate that ancient cultures, such as the pyramid builders of Egypt and the temple builders of India, may have known a way to retrieve this knowledge. Sharing new discoveries from experienced architects, engineers, and mathematicians, they show how the Great Pyramid is a three-dimensional mathematical equation in stone, bearing a potent message for humanity across time and space about who we are and where we come from.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781591433071
Publisher: Inner Traditions/Bear & Company
Publication date: 12/19/2017
Pages: 408
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Chandra Wickramasinghe, Ph.D., is the director of the Centre for Astrobiology at the University of Buckingham. A professor of applied mathematics and astronomy, he has taught at the University College Cardiff and the University of Cambridge. He is also the editor-in-chief of the Journal of Astrobiology and Outreach and lives in Cardiff, Wales.

Egyptian-born Robert Bauval began studying Egyptology in 1983. His first book, The Orion Mystery, was published in 1994, becoming a number-one bestseller translated into more than 25 languages. His research has been featured in documentaries throughout the world. He lives in Torremolinos, Spain.

Read an Excerpt

Chapter 6

Unravelling of a Controversy

Replication of Bacteria in a Cosmic Context

We all know that given the right conditions, which include water and nutrients, bacteria can grow exponentially. A typical doubling time for bacteria would be two to three hours. Continuing to supply nutrients, a single initial bacterium would generate some 240 offspring in four days, yielding a culture the size of a cube of sugar. Continuing for a further four days and the culture, now containing 280 bacteria, would be the size of a village pond. Another four days and the resulting 2120 bacteria would have the scale of the Pacific Ocean. Yet another four days and the 2160 bacteria would be comparable in mass to a molecular cloud like the Orion Nebula. And four days more still for a total time since the beginning of twenty days, and the bacterial mass would be that of a million galaxies. No non-biological process remotely matches this replication power of a biological cell. Once the immense quantity of organic material in the interstellar material is appreciated, a biological origin for it becomes a necessary conclusion. This was the position we had arrived at in 1980, and it continues to constitute one of the most compelling arguments in favor of cosmic biology.

But where are the astronomical locations where conditions for replication of bacteria can be found? Certainly not in the cold depths of space, where microbes could merely remain in a freeze-dried dormant state. Planets like the Earth provide too small a total mass of carbonaceous material in the right physical state to make any impact. It is therefore to comets we turned, arguing that comets are the main sources of biological particles in interstellar clouds. An individual comet is a rather insubstantial object. But our solar system possesses more than a hundred billion comets, that in total mass equal the combined masses of the outer planets Uranus and Neptune, about 1029 grams. If all the dwarf stars (sun-like stars) in our galaxy are similarly endowed with comets, then the total mass of all the comets in our galaxy, with its 1011 dwarf stars, turns out to be some 1040 grams, which is just the amount of all the interstellar organic particles that are found to be present in the dust clouds within the galaxy.

How would microorganisms be generated within comets, and then how could they get out of comets? We know as a matter of fact that comets do eject organic particles, typically at a rate of a million or more tons a day when they visit the inner, regions of the solar system. When the comets refreeze this amplified microbial material is also frozen in, only to be released when they become periodically warmed up in the inner solar system. Some of this bacterial matter may reach planets, which they can seed with life, some of it is expelled back into interstellar space.

Diseases from Space?

The next development in our story also came as a surprise and led to further clashes with orthodox science.12 June of 1977 was a particularly inclement month in Wales, and I had succumbed to one of the worst bouts of flu that I could remember. Fred Hoyle and I were in a phase of brisk telephone and fax communication at the time trying to fit a swathe of new astronomical data to our biological dust models.

All this was to change dramatically when, delirious with high fever, I telephoned Hoyle and posed the question, “Could this flu bug have possibly come from space? Could the old myth that influenza is connected with rain and drizzle be right after all? Could viruses and bacteria be carried in comet dust and actually be entering Earth to infect us at the present time?” I recalled that the connection between diseases like the common cold and influenza and inclement weather was well entrenched in Sri Lankan folklore. My mother always told us, “Don’t go out in the rain; you’ll catch the cold.”

My question to Fred brought down a pall of silence. He had listened to all that was said and replied, “I shall think about it and phone you back.” He did in fact telephone back only to agree that this could well be so! He was reminded of conversations he had many years ago with an Australian physicist E. G. (Taffy) Bowen who had pointed out that an amazing connection existed between freezing nuclei in rain clouds and meteor showers. So the evidence we needed may have already been there two decades earlier.

As a natural consequence of this line of thinking I guessed that patterns of viral diseases over the centuries may reflect the changing environment of cometary meteor showers—the Earth crossing the orbits of debris from different life-bearing comets. Could the common cold and influenza that are so common today have been absent in the portfolio of diseases in past times? I remember asking Hoyle another question. Did he know of any Shakespearean character with a common cold? Surely Shakespeare, who dealt with almost every human condition, may have thought fit to have a character sniffling with a heavy cold? After combing through Shakespeare’s plays the answer was that there were none.

This prompted us to study a variety books on medical history, including the writings of Hippocrates and Galen and the classic Indian medical treatise Charaka Samhita, all of which confirmed that there was certainly clear evidence of a changing pattern of infectious diseases over time. The twentieth-century belief that all pathogens must necessarily have a purely terrestrial origin had no basis in fact. We had argued earlier that comets carried the first life to the Earth 4.1 billion years ago, and this process of bringing new viruses and bacteria could not be assumed to have stopped at some distant time in the past. Comets are with us still and so must continue to have an effect.

Table of Contents

PUBLISHER’S PREFACE
A Mystery of the Third Kind
Acknowledgments

PA RT I

Origins of Life in the Cosmos
By Chandra Wickramasinghe, Ph.D.

Prologue

1 Definite Knowledge vs. Speculation
2 Unraveling of a Controversy
3 History of Panspermia
4 Cosmic Coincidences, God, Creationism, and Consciousness
5 Bacteria Entering Earth
6 Alien Planets and Alien Intelligence
7 Earth’s Continually Changing Conditions

PA R T II

Intelligent Speculation Based on Cutting-Edge Science
By Robert Bauval Prologue
8 The “Coincidence Pigeons”
9 Physics and Synchronicity
10 The Next Frontier of Knowledge
11 The Archives of the Mind

Conclusion: Forecasting the Future
BY CHANDRA WICKRAMASINGHE

Epilogue

APPENDIX I
The Concavity of the Great Pyramid: A Design Feature?
DID THE DESIGNER KNOW THE METER UNIT?
BY JEAN-PAUL BAUVAL

APPENDIX II
The Location of the King’s Chamber in the Great Pyramid
BY JEAN-PAUL BAUVAL

APPENDIX III
The Great Pyramid of Giza: New Facts, Discoveries, and Theories
BY GARY OSBORN

Notes

Bibliography

Index
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