It’s Raining Nanobacteria
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PRLEAP.COM) The nanobacteria study, by Sommer and Wickramasinghe, in the “Journal of Proteome Research” suggests that people infected with nanobacteria excrete the organisms in their urine, which evaporates into the atmosphere from open sewage sites. Nanobacteria exist within clouds, and when nanobacteria fall to earth inside rain droplets they are activated to start their infectious cycle again.
The Sommer and Wickramasinghe study, and other studies, report that nanobacteria are associated with kidney stones, coronary artery calcifications, and calciferous chronic prostatitis. Nanobacteria have also been linked to scleroderma, calciphylaxis, polycystic kidney disease, ovarian cancers, Parkinson’s disease, dental plaque, and dental pulp stones.
Nanobacteria were first discovered in 1988. They are so small that they cannot be seen with the usual light microscope, but they can be seen with electron microscopes. They are unique because they form calcifications and they produce a slimy substance for adherence.
Nanobacteria remain controversial. There is confusion over the name as “nannobacteria” and nanobacteria” both appear in the literature. Dr. Robert L. Folk, a geologist, once wrote that: “The idea of the existence of nannobacteria has been greeted with howls of disbelief by the majority of the biological community, who contend that these minute bodies cannot be bacteria because they are too small to contain the necessary genetic machinery for life” (Nanobacteria: surely not figments, but what under heaven are they? Natural Science).
Some are skeptical about nanobacteria. Elmer M. Cranton, M.D. and Dr. J.O. Cisar, have written that nanobacteria are not alive, but rather represent a self-duplicating crystal.
For more information visit the Nanobacteria Foundation at
www.NanobacteriaFoundation.org
Discuss Nanobacteria at:
http://NanobacteriaFoundation.org/anyboard9/forum/index.html
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E-mail:
ContactUs@NanobacteriaFoundation.org
Website:
http://www.Nanobacteria.org
Source: AP Sommer and NC Wickramasinghe: Functions and possible provenance of primordial proteins—Part II: microorganism aggregation in clouds triggered by climate change. Journal of Proteome Research, 2005, Jan-Feb;4(1):180-184.
Copyright © 2005, the Nanobacteria Foundation.
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