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Appendix D: Scientific Evidence An international team of scientists has recovered microorganisms in the upper reaches of the atmo- sphere that could have originated from outer space...The living bacteria, plucked from an altitude of 10 miles or higher by a scientific balloon, could have been deposited in terrestrial airspace by a passing comet, according to the researchers. The microorganisms are unlike any known on Earth, but the astro- biologists “want to keep the details under wraps until they are absolutely convinced that these are extra- terrestrial...” “A recent discovery indicates that microbes can remain dormant for millions of years...enough time to travel from planet to planet....” Living fungal spores have been discovered at altitudes of 7 miles...But observations from this and a related study suggest the presence of living bacteria far too high in the atmosphere to have originated from the surface of the planet... (Abstracted from p. 5, Psychic Reader, April 2000) Comment The bacteria could easily have originated on Earth, rising into the high atmosphere after any one of the major cataclysms that have occurred here. But more likely and probably the reason why things have be kept “under wraps” is that the bacteria originated on Tiamat (Lucifer, Phaeton) the planet that was destroyed by atomic weaponry and whose remains now make up the so-called asteroid belt and whose debris has continually fallen into earth atmosphere and onto the very sur- face, as Charles Fort and others have researched for decades. Now researchers probing the ocean bottom have found 18-story-high towers of stone - the tallest ever - near a section of volcanic fault ridges that extend for 6,200 miles along the Atlantic Ocean floor. Inspired by the formations' majestic heights and by the fact that the stone towers appear on a sea-floor mountain named Atlantis Massif, the scientists named the field of about two dozen stone structures the Lost City in honor of the fabled, flooded city. Not only are the underwater stone spirals unusual in composition and their location, scientists think they may offer a glimpse into Earth's earliest environments when life began and may possibly host new life forms. “Tt was clear these were unlike anything we'd ever seen before,” says Deborah Kelley, an oceanographer at the University of Washington and one of three people who traveled to the newly discovered under- world in a submersible vessel. 287 Bacteria from Space (Panspermia) Scientists Find ‘Lost City' of Ancient Rock Atlantis, Alien Visitation, and Genetic Manipulation