>>2678
Multicell I don't have any concrete proof of, but single cell is pretty much a fact. Even though NASA has never acknowledged it, and done everything they possibly could to hide it. Yet, a lot of the facts that prove it exists are in their own documents, in bits and pieces. The little bits and pieces don't mean much by themselves, but when you put them all together, it spells L,I,F,E.
I'm going to ramble for awhile, maybe a long while, about the bits and pieces. I'll try to keep speculation out of it, and stay just on verifiable facts.
NASA bullshit line #214:
>Nothing can survive on the moon, the moon is a place you would send something to sterilize it.
That's not true, and NASA knows it for a fact.
In 1967 NASA sent the 7 Lunar Surveyor missions to the moon. They were robotic landers equipped with a TV camera, a robotically operated scoop shovel and a penetrometer. For the first phase, the Lunar Surveyors stayed in orbit and sent back photos of the surface for a few weeks. Then they soft landed and surveyed the surface conditions at proposed Apollo landing sites. They took video of the area, poked and prodded the soil to try to determine composition, load bearing capacity, things of that nature. Principally what they wanted to know was whether the ground would hold up an Apollo lander without it sinking or sliding around in the soil, whatever.
A Live Bacteria Is Brought Back From The Moon
Apollo 12 landed about 500 feet away from Lunar Surveyor III. During the EVA the astronauts walked over to it, photographed it, and examined it. In addition they removed several parts from it for return to earth so they could be studied. Scientists wanted to know things like how did the paint hold up, did the plastic degrade, things like that. Back on earth, they took the camera apart and looked inside at the internal parts. Inside was a foam washer. They put the foam washer, along with other parts in broth and tried to culture any microorganisms that might be present. On the foam ring, they did get a successful culture. It was Streptococcus mitis, a common bacteria found in the human respiratory tract. Somebody probably coughed into the camera during assembly and deposited it there. It survived about 2 years on the moon and came back to earth still alive. Yes, it was heavily shielded inside that camera, but it did live there through the heat and cold, in a vacuum, for 2 years. So, can life survive on the moon? The answer is yes, for a fact.
An Exciting Discovery Buried