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Diseases from Space was published in 1979. Written by Sir Fred Hoyle and Professor N. Chandra Wickramasinghe, its subject matter remains controversial to this day
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REVIEW | FRANCIS A. ANDREW
DISEASES FROM SPACE
Sir Fred Hoyle
Professor N.C Wickramasinghe
R E V I E W B Y F R A N C I S A. A N D R E W
#ae
REVIEW | FRANCIS A. ANDREW
R E V I E W B Y F R A N C I S A. A N D R E W
DISEASES FROM SPACE
REVIEW | FRANCIS A. ANDREW
Diseases from Space was a highly controversial book
when it first came out in 1979. Its challenge to the
whole concept of where diseases originate still makes it
controversial in 2014. The book develops the
hypothesis that many of the most common diseases
which afflict mankind, such as influenza, the common
cold and whooping cough, have their origins in
extraterrestrial sources. The two authors argue the case
for outer space being the main source for these
pathogens- or at least their causative agents.
Overview Sir Fred Hoyle and Professor Nadine Chandra Wickramasinghe spent over 20 years investigating the nature and composition of interstellar dust. Though many theories regarding this dust had been postulated by various astronomers since the middle
of the 19th century, all were found to be wanting as and when new data on the gas and dust clouds became available. While Hoyle and Wickramasinghe never set out to be controversial, but rather, to explain the phenomenon they were investigating within the boundaries of conventional theory, their research led them to the astonishing but inevitable conclusion that, as the spectroscopic data of the gas clouds matched those for desiccated bacteria, the core component of interstellar dust was indeed just that - desiccated bacteria. This led the two scientists in the direction of explaining the spread of diseases in ways which challenged the mainstream human-to-human transmission process of diseases, substituting it with an alternative theory which postulated that diseases such as influenza and the common cold are incident from space and fall upon the Earth in what they term "pathogenic patches." Hoyle and Wickramasinghe found themselves compelled to understand the process of evolution in a manner at variance with the standard Darwinian model. They averred that genetic material in the form of incoming pathogens from the cosmos provided the mechanism for driving the
evolutionary engine.
Diseases From Space
Author Chandra Wickramasinghe,Fred
Hoyle
Country Great Britain
Language English
Genre Space medicine
Published 1979
ISBN 978-0060119379
REVIEW | FRANCIS A. ANDREW
Theory
Delivery mechanism for space incident pathogens
It is important to mention how Hoyle and Wickramasinghe describe the way pathogens are brought to
Earth from out space and what happens to these pathogens when they enter the terrestrial atmosphere.
How pathogens descend to earth from outer space.
In their opening chapter, Hoyle and Wickramasinghe argue that the idea of bacteria and viruses
descending upon the Earth from outer space at first may seem strange, but that they intend to
demonstrate by reasoned argument in succeeding chapters that the hypothesis is quite plausible.
Hoyle and Wickramasinghe aver that the pathogens from space are brought to Earth by comets. As the
comet, on its highly elliptical orbit around the solar system passes close to the sun, the heat from the
sun causes the comet to shed some of its outer layers. These layers contain dormant bacteria and
viruses which are released by the peeling effect as the comet gains close proximity to the sun. A more
detailed analysis of this process is dealt with in the two authors' book Lifecloud: The Origin of Life in the
Universe. If a bacteria should fall on a body such as the moon it will immediately be gasified as there is
no atmosphere to slow down its descent. The Earth's atmosphere serves to slow down the descent of
the bacterium or virus particle and so afford it a fair degree of protection. However the descent of the
virus through the Earth's atmosphere may itself prove to be a hazard for the incoming pathogen due to
heating caused by descent. Hoyle and Wickramasinghe demonstrate that the size of bacteria are small
enough to avoid being "cooked" on their descent from the stratosphere to the troposphere. Once at the
base of the stratosphere (9 miles over the tropics and 6 miles over the Earth's temperate zones), the
pathogens can be carried down to the lower atmosphere by rain and snow in as short a time as days and
weeks.
What happens to the pathogens on Earth.
The distribution patterns of the incoming pathogens as they fall on the Earth will be greatly determined by meteorological factors such as wind, storms on the sun, terrestrial thunderstorms and interaction between storms in the lower atmosphere and the air currents moving around the jet streams which circle the Earth. The two authors refer to these distributional patterns as "pathogenic patches" and argue that one's risk of contracting a disease from a space incident pathogen will be determined by the mere chance of whether or not one is within the boundaries of a "patch." When these pathogens hit ground level, they establish a reservoir for themselves in host plants, animals and humans. These reservoirs may last as short as a few weeks (as in the case of the influenza virus in humans) or for thousands of years (as in the case of the virus herpes simplex). Hoyle and Wickramasinghe contend that
REVIEW | FRANCIS A. ANDREW
movement of people and animals (especially birds) from one pathogenic patch to another causes the illusion of diseases being spread by people. They also controversially argue that medical authorities (such as the World Health Organisation are similarly operating under an illusion in setting up projects to rid the world of various diseases. From an historical perspective, Hoyle and Wickramasinghe have observed that many diseases which exist now did not exist at various times in the past; also they have found descriptions of diseases by Thucydides which defy any kind of comparison with known diseases in the modern period. Hoyle and Wickramasinghe site Thucydides "The Peloponesian Wars."
Human-to-human transmission of the common cold
The authors of Diseases from Space challenge conventional wisdom on how the common cold is
transmitted and refute the notion that it is contagious.
Cometary origin of respiratory diseases
Hoyle and Wickramasinghe challenge what is basically seen as a "fact" in the scientific medical
community - the human-to-human and animal-to-human transmission process for the spreading of
diseases. The two scientists point out that the influenza virus exists in various types and subtypes and
that the subtypes which use animals as reservoirs are not of the type that would infect humans. Hoyle
and Wickramasinghe argue that these viruses must be renewed from space on a frequent basis,
otherwise they would become extinct. It is at this point in their book that the two authors start to
present their evidence in the process of building up their case that so-called contagious diseases are in
fact incident from space. The two authors contend that if the spread of diseases is not by the human-to-
human transmission process, it necessarily follows the bacteria causing the diseases fall on humans from
the atmosphere. They note the difficulties involved in obtaining viral particles from the atmosphere due
to their scarcity over a wide area. While most of the incoming micrometeorites will fall on the polar
regions, the chances of finding viral particles from random core samples in the vast swathes of ice
sheets of Greenland and the Arctic are extremely slim. According to Hoyle and Wickramasinghe, person
to person transmission would not contradict a cometary origin for respiratory diseases for the reason
that there are no known reservoirs for the influenza and common cold viruses. This fact tends to lend
support to their theory of these virus particles having an extra-
terrestrial origin.
The slowness of human to human transmission
If two people happen to be in the way of a pathogenic patch, then both
will develop clinical symptoms of the disease simultaneously. One of the
problems with the person to person mode of transmission would be the
slow rate of infection involved in such a transmission process. The time
lapse involved in the process would be the incubation period of the
virus which is generally a day and a half, after which clinical symptoms
emerge. It would therefore take about ten days to two weeks to affect
fifty persons; such a slow rate is inconsistent with the general rapidity in
REVIEW | FRANCIS A. ANDREW
the spread of colds and influenza. Furthermore, it would be impossible for any susceptible person to
escape the disease if there were any person carrying a load of 10,000 million viral particles per cubic
meter - however, most susceptible persons do escape. Yet the persistence in the common cold is shown
by the high rates of infection; adults on average contract two to three colds per annum with children
contracting anything from between six and twelve per annum.
Sir Christopher Andrewes experiment
In demonstrating the weakness of the human-to-human transmission hypothesis, it would be well
worthwhile to focus in closely on the experiments conducted by Sir Christopher Andrewes and published
in his book "The Common Cold" Weidenfeld & Nicholson, 1965). A great deal of the work done by Sir
Christopher Andrewes is made use of in Diseases from Space. In a 1947 experiment, three pairs of
volunteers were given hot baths after which they were left to stand in a cool corridor clad only in
bathing attire. Three other pairs were given a shot of a cold virus and were subjected to chilling as per
the first three pairs. Another three pairs were given the virus alone but without the chilling. The groups
with the virus alone produced two colds. The group with the chilling plus inoculation with the dilute
virus produced four colds; however, the groups with the chilling and wetting alone did not produce any
colds. The conclusion from the experiment is that chilling and wetting do not produce colds. Actual
weather conditions may be a different story however as rain tends to form around micro meteoritic
particles, many of which may contain viruses.
Meteorological factors
Hoyle and Wickramasinghe point out that colds are more frequent when the grounds is cold and less
frequent when it is warm. The temperature differences between the sea and the land are produced by
the heating and cooling of the land. The coldest temperature difference between sea and land is in
February. This is when a thermodynamic engine carrying heat from the sea to the land comes into
operation thus bringing storms landward. These storms produce eddy transfers into the stratosphere.
The electrical fields generated by these transfers pull down micro-meteorites which otherwise would
take five years to reach down to the troposphere. Hoyle and Wickramasinghe explain that this process
would require the particles to be of the size of around 5 millionths of a centimeter - which is about the
size of viral particles.
Another experiment
Another of Sir Christopher Andrewes' experiments cited in Diseases from Space involved eight people
being exposed for ten hours to others infected with the common cold virus. Between twenty four and
thirty six hours later, some of those inoculated with the virus remained symptom free. Eleven other
people were exposed to those with fully developed colds. Only one person, who had been exposed to
the symptom free group, caught a cold. As in the case of the aforementioned experiment, there appears
to be low occurrence of spread by contact. Hoyle and Wickramasinghe discount the suggestion that this
REVIEW | FRANCIS A. ANDREW
phenomenon could be explained by immunity due to the large numbers of viral types and subtypes of
the common cold.
Investigating influenza in Tristan Da Cunha
Hoyle and Wickramasinghe examine the incidences of common cold outbreaks in the island of Tristan Da
Cunha. Boats frequently call at the island without there being any epidemics present. However, between
1964 and 1967, four out of eight epidemics appeared to be associated with boats. The authors cite three
reason as to why the person to person mode of transmission does not hold up in this particular case.
First of all, four of the eight epidemics remain unexplained. Secondly, owing to a volcanic eruption on
the island in 1961, the islanders spent 1962/3 in Britain, and so had plenty time to develop an immunity
from the cold. Thirdly, boats call at the island frequently enough to maintain the immunity. The most
viable explanation given by the authors is that boats moving from one pathogenic patch to another are
more vulnerable than the island itself, and that should a pathogenic patch hit the island itself, boats in
the vicinity will likely be hit ahead of time.
Experimenting with the cold virus on Eilean Nan Ron.
Another of Sir Christopher Andrewes' experiments cited in Diseases from Space involved groups of
volunteers being "marooned" on the Scottish island of Eilean Nan Ron in an unspecified year in the
1960's. The volunteers remained on the island for approximately three months - July to September. The
island was completely deserted - the inhabitants having left twelve years previously mainly for economic
reasons. On July 8, one man had a cold, on July 9 another one succumbed to a cold, and on July 11,
three more men contracted one. No more colds were reported until the termination of the isolation
period on September 19. The final part of the experiment involved sending landing parties whose
members had been given shots of the cold virus. The original volunteers were then divided into three
groups of four and sent to different parts of the island. The members of the landing party stayed in a
room for three hours, during which time they spent coughing and sneezing oral and nasal discharge all
over various objects in the room. At the end of the three hour period, Party A (of the original volunteers
) entered the room. The members of the landing party then went into a room which separated them
from Party B with a blanket which reached a few inches from the ceiling and a few inches from the floor.
This blanket was of a weave which permitted droplet nuclei from coughing and sneezing discharge to
pass through but prevented the passage of coarser particles. Party C were completely exposed to the
members of the landing party, fraternizing, eating and drinking with them in close proximity. The
astonishing result of this experiment was that no-one in either of the three groups developed a cold.
Investigating the cold virus on Spitzbergen
Hoyle and Wickramasinghe examined the incidence of colds in the island of Spitzbergen for the year
1931. Reports of incidences of the common cold were co-incident with the arrival of the first boats
REVIEW | FRANCIS A. ANDREW
during the spring thaw. It was therefore extrapolated that the cold virus had been brought to the island
by infected seamen on the boats. The authors of Diseases from Space offer an alternative explanation
for this co-incidence: they argue that the melting of the ice in spring causes disturbances in the
atmosphere which pull down micrometeorites to ground level. As the melting of the ice allows for open
water for the entry of ships, the false impression is given that it is the ships that are responsible for the
bringing of the disease into the island. The three seamen who had come down with colds were blamed
for spreading the disease throughout the island. Yet their names were never released, nor was there any
record of the traces of their movement. Hoyle and Wickramasinghe observe that in all cases where colds
and influenza are brought to isolated communities, there are no details released of the contacts
responsible for allegedly bringing the diseases. They are generally, nameless, faceless and shadowy
individuals who, without trace, consistently remain in obscurity. The two authors interestingly equate
this strange phenomenon with the medieval figure of death - the Grim Reaper.
Human-to-human transmission of influenza?
As in the case of the common cold, Hoyle and Wickramasinghe demonstrate that the theory of person
to person transmission of the influenza virus is seriously wanting.
The influenza pandemic of 1918/19
Influenza was first mentioned by Hippocrates in the year 412BC. Although there is no known human
reservoir for the influenza virus, it has been consistently affecting the human species since the earliest
of times. Hoyle and Wickramasinghe provide some notable facts concerning the patterns of spread of
the various influenza epidemics which occurred in the 19th and 20th centuries. The most lethal of all
influenza epidemics of recent times was undoubtedly the 1917 - 1919 outbreak of the so-called Spanish
Flu. Between 1917 and 1919, Australia was mainly free of the disease, the first death from it being
reported there as late on as 1919. The Australian authorities credited this to their strict quarantine
policy; however, quarantining has never proven to be effective. Hoyle and Wickramasinghe claim that
the emphasis on the quarantining argument was mainly due to the bureaucracy protecting itself from
criticism. While Australia remained free of the disease, there had been many reports of attacks on ships
which subsequently called in at Australian ports but without causing any spread of the disease. When
the pandemic broke out in 1917, Boston and Bombay were affected on the same day. Yet it took three
weeks before the disease spread to New York. After Joliet, Illinois in Illinois was hit, the disease was not
detected in Chicago until one full month later - a distance of only thirty eight miles. An interesting case
study is that of a comparison between Pittsburgh and Toledo which are neighboring cities. The
respective populations did similar jobs, were of similar age groups, and, in normal times, had identical
death rates. Yet,in 1918, the death rates from influenza in Pittsburgh exceeded that of Toledo by an
enormous 400%.
REVIEW | FRANCIS A. ANDREW
Sir Charles Creighton's analyses of influenza outbreaks in mid-19th century England.
The authors of Diseases from Space note the comments made by the distinguished British
epidemiologist, Sir Charles Creighton in 1894 concerning the earlier epidemics of 1833, 1837 and 1847.
Regarding the rapidity in which the influenza virus spread throughout Great Britain, Creighton described
it as a "miasma covering the land." Such was the entrenched position of the human-to-human
hypothesis in the mode of transmission of the disease that Creighton's rejection of it resulted in much
criticism of him from his fellow medical practitioners. The search for the causative agent of influenza has
proven to be elusive. In 1920 it was thought that Pfeiffer's Influenza Bacillus was the main candidate.
This was eventually proven to be wrong.
Antigenic Drift and Antigenic Shift.
Hoyle and Wickramasinghe describe the three basic types of influenza virus. Type A influenza virus
which causes epidemics and pandemics. Then there is Type B influenza virus which basically causes
localised epidemics. Type C influenza virus is very uncommon and is not dealt with in Diseases from
Space. They go on to explain that influenza viruses are classified according to what are termed H and N
antigens. The change in the virus over the years is a process known as Antigenic Drift. When there is a
dramatic change in the virus, the process is known as Antigenic Shift. Antigenic Drift may me attributed
to a virus' response to the development of human Immunity (medical) to it.However,Antigenic Drift may
be more difficult to explain. F.M. Burnett and P.E. Lind demonstrated in the laboratory that genetic
crosses between humans and animals is possible. When this happens the new strain of virus is "shocked
into virulence" by some kind of natural event. Hoyle and Wickramasinghe point out the basic problem
with the recombinant virus theory. Should such a virus spread from a particular central focus point, it
would not attain geographical diversity but would rather be localised in its reach.Hoyle and
Wickramasinghe aver that because the new virus types are global in their scope, their source is from
outer space.
Testing the Drift and Shift Theories
The two scientists examine closely the pattern of spread of various flu epidemics. The so-called Asian flu
of 1957 took four months to spread to Europe; Hoyle and Wickramasinghe query as to whether it would
have taken all this time to spread along the busy air routes from Asia to Europe if the mode of
transmission were from human to human. The two scientists note that when the so-called Hong Kong
fluhit California, it was the small town of Needles, California that was first affected rather than the large
conurbations such as San Francisco, Los Angeles or San Diego. Forty five weeks later the disease was
reported in the state of Montana but had not traveled along the much busier and more popular air
routes to Chicago and New York. By week forty six, the virus had spread to New York, but had not yet
reached Chicago, Dallas or Miami. What the authors interestingly note is that by week forty seven, the
November/December holiday traffic had still left Miami unaffected by the virus. They also note with
equal interest that while slowly moving boats have supposedly carried the virus around,faster moving
REVIEW | FRANCIS A. ANDREW
aircraft have failed to function as conveyers of the disease ( p. 68 ). Once again, Hoyle and
Wickramasinghe attribute this pattern of spread, which fails to accord with the human-to-human
transmission concept, to theory that viruses are incident from space.
Further evidence against the recombinant theory
The two authors also point out further evidence which detracts from the recombinant virus theory.
Citing J. Mulder's and M. Masurel's 1958 article in the lancet, Hoyle and Wickramasinghe argue from the
evidence contained therein that the recombination theory is deficient in explaining the outbreaks of
influenza epidemics. In their article entitled "Pre-epidemic antibodies against the 1957 strain of Asian
influenza virus in the Serum (blood) of older persons living in the Netherlands," Mulder and Masurel
found high concentrations of anti-bodiesto the Asian virus ]H2N2 in older people of the 75 - 85 year age
range. These blood samples were obtained prior to the outbreak of the epidemic. Younger people did
not have such high concentrations of these anti-bodies. Hoyle and Wickramasinghe contend that these
anti-bodies were obtained by these people during the influenza outbreak of 1880 – 77 years earlier.
Prior to the H3N2 pandemic blood samples obtained by S.J Machin, C.W. Porter & J.S. Oxford showed
anti-bodies to this strain in the age range 69 – 79 years but with a greater degree of immunity showing
in the 79 - 80+ age range. The implication of this is that the 1889/90 outbreak was indeed H3N3. The
antibodies to H2N2 and H3N2 in the blood samples does not bode well for the recombinant theory and
antigenic drift for the reason that these two subtypes are repeating themselves 75 – 80 years later.
According to the recombinant theory, these two subtypes should have come together to produce a third
subtype; obviously the evidence does not indicate that they did so. Hoyle and Wickramasinghe link the
H2N2 and H3N2 with Halley's Comet which has a periodicity of 76.2 years.
Recurrence of viral strains.
The dominant strains of influenza during the decade 1946 - 1957 was H1N1. After 1957, this subtype
disappeared but re-appeared in 1977. The main point here is that types and sub-types of influenza virus
can disappear and then re-appear at a future date, and that while this fact, according to Hoyle and
Wickramasinghe, fails to fit the recombinant theory, has no difficulty within the context of a theory
whose explanation involves influenza types and sub-types as being phenomena incident from outer
space.
Testing human-to-human transmission of influenza.
By investigating the pattern of influenza infection in places of communal living, Hoyle and
Wickramasinghe successfully debunk the theory of the human to human transmission process of
influenza.
REVIEW | FRANCIS A. ANDREW
Communal living and influenza transmission
One of the most effective ways of testing the theory of human-to-human transmission of influenza
would be to nvestigate the incidences of influenza attacks on places of communal living - such as
boarding schools and army barracks. Hoyle and Wickramasinge looked at the attendance records of
schools in the Cardiff, Wales area during the 1978 influenza epidemic of 1978. They state: "We soon saw
from the school attendance records that pupils across the age range of a particular school were much
more similar to each other in their response to the influenza epidemic than they were to pupils in other
schools. Since we could not believe that pupils in different schools were inherently different from each
other, this meant that some other factor had to be controlling the situation, which we attributed
immediately to the patchy incidence of the influenza virus on to the Cardiff area" ( p. 87 ). Headmasters
and teachers informed the two authors that there was really no difference in the spacing of the desks
between one school and another. Likewise, there was really no difference in the play habits of children
between one school and another. Yet, in spite of these similarities, there were considerable differences
in the attack rates. Hoyle and Wickramasinghe stressed the importance of the geographical areas of the
schools involved in their survey.
St. Donat's School investigation
The study the two scientists conducted on St. Donat's School near St. Donat's Castle, is of particular
interest. What they found did not correspond with the human to human transmission process. In fact
their investigations did not at all augur well for that process. In 1975, the school suffered an attack of
upper respiratory disease. There were forty eight recorded cases of influenza. The school dormitories
were built with low ceilings and each contained four pupils. If the process of transmission was by the
human to human process, then the expected pattern of viral attack would show as non-random
clustering throughout the dormitories. However, if the the viruses were airborne, then the pattern of
infection should be that of random distribution. On analysing the pattern of infections throughout the
dormitories through the medical records provided by the sister, Miss Stanley, Hoyle and
Wickramasinghe found that one dormitory had three victims, five dormitories had two victims and thirty
five had one victim. Hoyle and Wickramasinghe were now convinced that influenza was not a contagious
disease and that its process of transmission was not human to human.
Howell's School investigation
Investigation of the pattern of influenza attacks at Howell's School, showed, as in the case of St. Donat's,
that influenza was not transmissible. Of the thirty two victims who succumbed to the disease, the first
ten reported to the sick bay at spaced intervals; however the others were contemporaneous. As they
reported to the sick bay within a short time of each other, it would be impossible that they would have
infected each other. The erratic patterning in the spread of the disease convinced Hoyle and
Wickramasinghe that while Sir Charles Creighton's explanation of influenza epidemics as being caused
by a cloud covering the land was wrong, neither could they be accounted for by the analogy of "....a
bucket handed along a line of people, as it would tend to do through person to person transmission ( p.
REVIEW | FRANCIS A. ANDREW
101 ). Instead the authors described the nature of the spread of the disease as "jumping about" ( p. 102
). This "jumping about" could be explained by factors related to Meteorology.
How pathogens are distributed
The authors turned their attention to the means by which pathogens incident from space could descend
through the Earth's atmosphere and land in such a localized way as to affect schools. While the
patchiness of the disease could not be explained by large particles of around five Microns which would
fall through the atmosphere over a wide area in a few weeks and be washed away in rivers and sewers.
However particles of less than five millionths of a centimeter can be brought to ground level through the
electrical effects of storms, and eddies of air extending between the troposphere and the stratosphere
can bring down particles of around fifty millionths of a centimeter. These particles serve as nuclei for
rain droplets thus creating the patchiness related to rain formation in the form of Cumulus clouds and
[19] frontal disturbances. While particles enclosed within raindrops would merely be washed way
through [20] natural drainage systems and the drainage systems of towns and cities (gutters and sewers
). However, the mechanism by which the virus in Raindrops is brought into contact with human hosts is
by means of Evaporation. When the skies suddenly clear on stormy days, the pathogens are released by
the evaporation of raindrops that have not reached ground level. The released pathogens are brought
down by local Turbulence whereby they may find human, animal and plant hosts.
Debunking the animal to human transmission process.
Hoyle and Wickramasinghe mention the act that as there is no human reservoir for the influenza virus it
was once thought that the virus jumped from animals to man - swine being the main reservoir. Now, the
main carrier of the disease is thought to be birds. The authors aver that the jumping of the virus from
bird to man must be a "rare event" ( p. 122 ) as such a process of transmission has never been observed.
The spread of the disease would have to be by "single transfer cases" ( p. 122 )on a person to person
basis; but, as the authors point out, this method of multiplication of the disease does not appear to be
supported by the evidence. Hoyle and Wickramasinghe examine the spread of the 1918 influenza
pandemic in the state of Alaska. Their documentary evidence is Governor Thomas R. Riggs' testimony to
the United States Senate Committee on Appropriations, Monday January 16th 1919. Governor Thomas
R. Riggs began his testimony with the conventional wisdom that it had been boats which had brought
the virus to Alaska, yet, as Hoyle and Wickramasinghe point out, Riggs' evidence points away from this
and towards unconventional explanatory sources. Most of Alaska is ice-bound and travel by dog team is
at the pace of a mere twenty to thirty miles per day. The disease had hit Kodiak Island but there had
been no boats at this island. The theory that it had been brought by Migratory birds fails as by the time
the disease had hit in November/December, the Alaskan migratory birds and long before moved south
and their droppings had been covered in snow. When it is considered that Alaska is twice the size of the
state of Texas and, that at the time of the pandemic in 1919, the population was both nomadic and
thinly spread, and that the rate of travel was a mere twenty to thirty miles per day, the human to human
transmission theory can be safely ruled out.
REVIEW | FRANCIS A. ANDREW
A Historical Perspective.
By examining the historical incidences of various diseases, the authors attempt to add credibility to their
theory that many diseases both emanate from outer space and fail the contagion hypothesis.
In considering so-called Infectious diseases from an historical perspective, Sir Fred Hoyle and Chandra
Wickramasinghe make clear that for a virus to maintain an effective human reservoir, there must be a
high enough birth rate for the virus to spread itself as surviving humans who have a life-long immunity
to a viral attack will no longer be able to function as reservoirs. For person to person transmission to be
effective, there must be high concentrations of population. As early hunter-gatherer societies were
concentrated in small groups and widely scattered ( as in the case of the Alaskan Eskimo population
referred to above )diseases infecting these early human societies must therefore have originated from
an outside source.
In examining the disease of Poliomyelitis the authors mention the case of this disease having been
discovered in an Egyptian pre-dynastic ( Pre-dynastic Egypt) mummy. Hoyle and Wickramasinghe
investigate other epidemic outbreaks and notice the sporadic nature of their occurrence. Trachoma,
Cholera, Measles, Mumps, Chickenpox, Bubonic plague, Smallpox, all display a mysterious coming and
going. The authors are convinced that the explanation of this phenomenon lies in recognising a space-
based origin of these diseases.
Space incident pathogens and Evolution.
Hoyle and Wickramasinhge link space based viruses and bacteria to the evolutionary process. They
explain what Paleontology paleontologists term the Cambrian explosion, in which the Fossil record
indicates a sudden extinction of Species and the sudden emergence of new ones, by the process of "viral
storms" of incoming pathogens wiping out most species but, at the same time, allowing the survivors to
incorporate the new genetic material into their Genomes and progress upwards to the next evolutionary
stage. In this, they reject Darwinian evolution which explains the emergence of species in slow
incremental stages over long periods of geological time. As a corollary, they claim that there are no
Missing Links or Transitional fossils between the mainline species.
Spectroscopic evidence for pathogens in space.
In Appendix 1 of the book, the authors present spectroscopic evidence spectroscope for the existence of
biological material in interstellar clouds of gas and dust. The spectroscopic lines in the Trapezium
Cluster, closely match laboratory obtained spectroscopic lines for Cellulose. The spectroscopic evidence
supporting the evidence for Astrobiology is more fully taken up and developed in Hoyle's and
Wickramasinghe's other books related to the subject. These are The Relation of Biology to Astronomy,
REVIEW | FRANCIS A. ANDREW
Our Place in the Cosmos, The Intelligent Universe, Life on Mars, Astronomical Origins of Life. For more
information on the cometary mechanism for the transportation of pathogens to planets, see Living
Comets.
The development of the theory of bacteria in interstellar dust clouds.
For a more detailed analysis of how Hoyle and Wickramasinghe reached the conclusion that desiccated
bacteria ( bacteria denuded of water )was the principle composition of interstellar clouds see The
Theory of Cosmic Grains, From Grains to Bacteria, Evolution from Space, A Journey with Fred Hoyle.
Publication history
First published in 1979 by J.M. Dent & Sons Ltd. Published in 1980 by Harper & Row. Published in 1981
by Sphere Books Ltd.