Question:

Was that meteor from Peru filled with alien bacteria?

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Their symptoms don't seem to resemble those of being affected by toxic fumes. What if some of those bacteria are still in the area, and if animals nearby carry it to cities all over South America? It could end up being a world wide epidemic.

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6 ANSWERS


  1. I've been wondering about that...perhaps it was really the load of stuff that comes out of an airplane's bathroom, the um toilet septic tank so to speak, a big frozen ball of...you know, and they didn't know it wasn't a meteor until they tested it, and now they are too embarrassed to say it was that, or no one wants to take the blame for making people sick who were touching um you know, some of that grey stuff in the movie looks like toilet paper...the plane that dumped it may have made a mistake? What else could it be? Oh maybe it's from the space station. A big ball of you know...human waste, expelled from the station, fell to earth...it seems no one is talking right now, we'll have to wait and see. I don't think it's alien in nature or anything like that. It came from humans, I think.

    Also with all the cameras on earth, you would think they would have pictures of the thing coming in. Was it on fire? Or just a streak in the atmosphere as it came down? Did it come straight down or at an angle? Where are the satellite pictures of it? I have questions too.


  2. here are the real news.

    Russian Military Intelligence Analysts are reporting today that one of the United States most secretive spy satellites, the KH-13, targeting Iran was 'destroyed in its orbit' with its main power generator powered by the radioactive isotope Pu-238 surviving re-entry and crashing in a remote region of the South American Nation of Peru, and where hundreds are reported to be ill from radiation poisoning.Western media reports are stating that the US spy satellite debris hitting Peru was caused by a meteor, but which, according to these reports, would be 'impossible' as the size of 30-meter crater, if caused by a meteorite, would have hit the ground with about as much energy as 1 kiloton tactical nuclear weapon, and which would have been recorded by the seismic stations around the World.

    and here is the link.

    http://newsfromrussia.com/opinion/feedba...

  3. No, even if there were any organic material on the meteorite, it would have been incinerated upon entry into the atmosphere.  Scientists now are pretty sure it was a meteorite that hit, and not "blue ice" a volcanic event or something else.  The crater was superficial, and volcanic events go much deeper.  They estimate its original size of the meteor to have been around 10 feet, most of which burned away.  As for the mystery illnesses, they are being attributed to a mass psycho-somatic reaction to the stress of the strangeness of the event.  Apparently the sounds, light and rain of rocks is enough to throw you off-kilter and make you feel slightly icky.  Another theory is that it may have kicked up some virus that was in the soil.  Something similar happened in 1994 in an earthquake in Southern California, where a landslides raised clouds of dust containing an old flu-like virus named Norwalk Virus, after the earthquake.

    As for the answer stating that it was some sort of radioactive spy satellite and that any meteorite impact would create a 1-kiloton explosion, well, that's just absurd.  Assuming it were a radioactive satellite and the locals are suffering from radiation poisoning, their responses were fairly instantaneous, and radition poisoning is not instantaneous, and symptoms go far beyond the "flu-like" symptoms reported.  Swollen tongues, blisters, hair falling out, organ failure, tumors, cancer . . . these are the symptoms of radiation sickness.  Not the flu.  Second of all, meteors come in all sizes, from the earth-devastating to the harmless cosmic dust which falls at a nearly constant rate over the entire surface of the earth, causing no ill effects.  

    Definitions:  

    Asteroid:  Hard object floating around space.

    Meteor:  Asteroid that has entered the atmosphere.

    Meteorite:  The mineral name of a meteor that has impacted the earth.

    Crackpot:  a person who ignores common sense in favor of the farsical.

  4. si

  5. Well, I read in the local newspaper a couple of days ago, that there were no signs of toxic elements in the area. Still, they haven't explained why these people are getting sick.

    I'll keep an eye on that and let you know!

  6. Whoa! You guys watch a lot of TV?

    The gases released seem to come from volcanic vent that was "disturbed" by the meteor that fell.

    The crater looks much smaller than 30 meters diameter. The reason the info is slow or that there are no photos or videos of the actual occurring is because it is in a very remote area of the Altiplano in the Andes, people do not have cameras there, just enough to eat for the day.

    Sorry to disappoint you. I better stop you are going to miss a star treck rerun.

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