I reserve judgement about the veracity of the basic idea - it seems credible to me, but Chandra Wickramasinghe, who now carries the torch for the scientific theory of panspermia, has been accused of tendentiousness and sloppy scientific practice by the media.
Nevertheless, an interesting idea and site to investigate. — Wayfarer
I remember maybe 10 years ago, a meteorite was found that had organic material encased in it. It was speculated at that time that this might be evidence of life and might be how life began on earth. — T Clark
Such a find would be pretty strong evidence for panspermia, which is why you were most likely duped by the tabloids...
I reckon the only meteorites that contain organic matter are the packages of poop jettisoned from the ISS :D . If you can find the original source, it might be interesting though! — VagabondSpectre
From the webpage, it seems like they are saying single cell organisms from other planets are brought to earth, where they seed life here. Is that your understanding? — T Clark
it might be regarded as fringe science, but I find it interesting nonetheless. — Wayfarer
Indeed, it does not answer the origin question, but it opens up possibilities to the origin being in some environment that would never plausibly be found here.It just pushes the origin question to another planet. — T Clark
This one seems pretty unlikely. Earth has made life its own, evolving well beyond whatever may have dropped from space. Any virus from space would not have evolved to infect terrestrial life. Epidemics are home grown I would think.Actually they make the case that some epidemics originate from extra-terrestrial material. — Wayfarer
I remember maybe 10 years ago, a meteorite was found that had organic material encased in it. It was speculated at that time that this might be evidence of life and might be how life began on earth. — T Clark
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