which were pelted to pieces during these times. The water from these water planets was slung about and became the dirty
snowballs humans call comets that sling past the Sun periodically. The magma from these shattered planets of course
became the Asteroid Belt. But there was more than water and rock that was disbursed. There was life, components of
life, as these water planets were life bearing planets. Out in space, such components cannot rot, as the bacteria that
cause decomposition have no oxygen. But as recently falling orange snow in Siberia has shown, when deposited in an
environment where bacteria and oxygen exist, these petrochemicals soon rot! How can these petrochemicals survive
the fall to Earth, when solid objects and the meteor itself is set ablaze? Certainly meteors survive the fall, and are
located and considered prized objects for museums or private collectors. If the meteor is small, it may burn completely
upon entry, but if large, survives. Upon impact, the meteor can explode, releasing petrochemicals encased within.
This is what occurred in Peru when a
biological elements into the atmosphere. These did not contain life, such as bacterium or viruses, but were not the
harmless components of rotting life one finds in cesspools or during soil formation. It was not merely stinky -- it was
irritating. The components picked up in the past during periodic passages of Planet X through the Asteroid Belt are not
simply representative of the life on a water planet, which might be assumed to be vegetative and lower life forms such
worms or protozoan. This soup includes the results of decomposition, in various stages. What adheres to the tail of
Planet X varies according to chemical attraction, so some material is gathered while other material is ignored. Thus, an
exploding meteor does not spew forth what one might find in rotting material, as some irritating chemicals are there in
excess. Can these chemicals kill? The report of the bull dropping dead should not be unexpected, as the vapors
released when the superheated meteor exploded replaced the normally available oxygen in air. The bull simply
suffocated.
Mystery Illness Strikes After Meteorite Hits Peruvian Village
Sep 17, 2007
Scientist Confirms Meteorite in Puno, Peru is a Chondrite
Sep 18, 2007
http://www.zetatalk2.com/index/zeta400.htm[2/5/2012 9:57:30 AM]
ZetaTalk: Peru Meteor Sickness
Russia Probes Smelly Orange Snow
Feb 2, 2007
http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/europe/6323611.stm
http://www.zetatalk2.com/index/zeta400.htm[2/5/2012 9:57:30 AM]
ZetaTalk: Blackberry Outages
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BlackBerry Outage Frustrates Users Again
February 12, 2008