The remains of liv­ing mat­ter have been found in inter­stel­lar dust clouds

Professor’s alien life ‘seed’ the­ory claimed

New evi­dence from astro­bi­ol­ogy “over­whelm­ingly” sup­ports the view that life was seeded from out­side Earth, a sci­en­tist has claimed.

Prof Chan­dra Wick­ra­mas­inghe of Cardiff Uni­ver­sity says the first microbes were deposited on Earth 3,800m years ago.

The astro­bi­ol­o­gist has helped devel­oped the pansper­mia the­ory which sug­gests an extra-terrestrial ori­gin for life.

He argues for a cycle of life as microbes find their way into comets and “mul­ti­ply and seed other planets”.

In the arti­cle, pub­lished in the Inter­na­tional Jour­nal of Astro­bi­ol­ogy, Mon­day, he argues humans and indeed all life on Earth is of alien ori­gin, brought onto the planet by comets hit­ting the planet.

Prof Wick­ra­mas­inghe, of Cardiff University’s cen­tre for astro­bi­ol­ogy, says there is a cycli­cal trans­fer process of life from planet to planet.

He believes comets hit plan­ets and push liv­ing organic mat­ter out into space, some of which sur­vives and in turn gets trans­ferred to devel­op­ing plan­e­tary sys­tems over a timescale of mil­lions and mil­lions of years, seed­ing life on the newly formed planets.

He accepts this model still does not explain how life actu­ally began in the first place, but says there is no hard evi­dence to sup­port the the­ory that life only began in a “pri­mor­dial soup” on Earth, or other places.

Over the past three decades research has shown that large swathes of the Milky Way are strewn with gigan­tic dust clouds full of organic mol­e­cules, which some peo­ple have argued shows life emerg­ing inde­pen­dently from new in these clouds.

Dr. Chan­dra Wickramasinghe

In his paper, he says recent inter­pre­ta­tion of spec­tra read­ings from the organic mol­e­cules found in inter­stel­lar clouds has indi­cated that they are in fact the remains of bac­te­ria which has been bro­ken down, rather than being built up.

Inter­stel­lar clouds appear to be the grave­yard of life not its cra­dle,” he said.

Each time a new plan­e­tary sys­tem forms a few sur­viv­ing microbes find their way into comets. These then mul­ti­ply and seed other plan­ets,” he said.

He adds: “We are thus part of a con­nected chain of being that extends over a large vol­ume of the cos­mos. Evi­dence is point­ing inex­orably in this direction.”

The pro­fes­sor and his late col­league Sir Fred Hoyle cham­pi­oned the pansper­mia the­ory from the 1960s.