whose grimacing face was more tooth than otherwise. African Black Man was covered with hair, in his early stages,
and though black men of today are without beards in the main, beards were present in the prototype. And the
descendants of China Man would be surprised to learn he had a tail for quite some time.
Man, in each of the 6 races, was developed in stages, and between these development stages was allowed a period of
time for things to settle down and for the genetically engineered product to be road tested. Would it break down?
Frequently this happened, resulting in intervention, fine tuning the product to correct whatever was deemed to be the
problem. Archeologists discover bones, such as those of Neanderthal Man, and wonder what became of him. Did he
die out? Did he evolve? It seems he rather abruptly disappeared, and such a strapping fellow, he was!
Neanderthal Man was taken in hand to correct a problem. All of him? Yes. This was affected by making him sterile, a
simple snip to the male, where he roamed free, and genetically engineering those taken into the lab. So there be no
misinterpretation, let us explain that the lab did not consist of cages, but in this instance was an island, and a paradise
at that. The lab was a controlled environment, but with no more controls than necessary. So what were Neanderthal's
problems, and what did he become? Neanderthal, big brute that he was, had a digestive problem. It is often assumed
that he died out because he was stupid, or confrontational, but he was none of these and underwent change only
because he had tummy troubles. He was not living his full life, and some died young, due to inability to digest the
foods available, to take advantage of the fauna and flora that were perforce his menu. Coming out of his genetic
correction, and returned to his environs, he looked different - a bit like Cro Magnon Man.
The bones of Homo Erectus simply mark the evolution of more than one race at a particular stage. Where did he go?
Into the labs to become the next stage. You can equate the puzzle archeologists are trying to put together with litter
along the highway. Here there are Coke bottles, there plastic wrappers, and at yet another stretch, no litter at all. If one
did not understand that litter was influenced by recycling efforts and laws, the price paid for aluminum and glass, and
the dedication of local groups or commandeered prisoners set out to pick the roadside clear, the patterns would make
no sense. The missing link in the evolution of man is not a particular pile of bones as yet undiscovered, it is the teams
of genetic engineers who periodically descended on Earth to check on their handiwork, and left when mankind had
made another leap.
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ZetaTalk: DNA Building Blocks
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ZetaTalk: DNA Building Blocks
Note: written on Jul 15, 1995.
Where carbon and silicon serve as the base upon which life is built, throughout the Universe that we, the Zetas, are
cognizant of, there are other variants. Many elements you, on Earth, consider to be trace elements are common on other
worlds. An example is the element lithium, which is so remarkably soothing to those humans diagnosed as bipolar. It
is no accident that these individuals are found to have a higher incidence of creativity, energy, and intelligence. It was
for those qualities that a genetic contribution was made from worlds where lithium happened to be a common element.
Doctors are not curing a disease by medicating with lithium, they are correcting an imbalance.
On some worlds iron is a trace element, and if carbon based, the blood does not rely on iron in the manner that
creatures on your Earth do. There, they do not develop iron deficiency anemia, but develop a similar reaction to a lack
of silicon, the most common substitute for iron in this matter. Of course, the manner in which blood chemistry works
in these instances has more differences than parallels. Humans are sometimes shocked to learn that aliens have green
or clear blood, and correctly assume that the blood chemistry is radically different. One reason that we, the Zetas, were
chosen to create a hybrid race with humans was our relative compatibility in this area. Our home planets had iron in
abundance. Should one doubt that elements vary in their proportion throughout the Universe, one has but to look to
meteors, where nickel is sought. Beyond nickel, look to what variance is found between the substances in meteors and
your average hunk of Earth, or for that matter, what variances are found when comparing one meteor against another.
Perhaps, to humans, the most surprising difference would be that oxygen is not the breath of life to all, as it is on Earth
and to those life forms commonly visiting Earth. Why else would some of your ancient visitors have worn helmets?
On their worlds, a helium component is key, and on the surface of your Earth they are drowning for lack of this as
surely as you drown when under water, away from free oxygen in the proportion you require it. We have mentioned
that some worlds would be considered radioactive by you, yet life lives there. How has their life adapted to the
bombardment that disrupts your processes. Their chemistry, in fact, requires this bombardment, in the same manner
that you require sunlight in order to manufacture vitamin D, without which your bones go soft. Life evolved on those
planets while this situation existed, and DNA that learned to utilize the environment, rather than sicken from it, was
the survivor that propagated. Just so many variations developed, on many worlds, and their differences are greater than
their similarities.
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ZetaTalk: Biorhythms
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ZetaTalk: Biorhythms
Note: written on Aug 15, 1995.
Researchers have correctly identified rhythms in humans that ebb and flow, with great regularity, commonly known as
biorhythms. These have been divided into categories, which are not all that precise, in our opinion, nor do they deal
with any but a minority of the biorhythms actually operand. Do biorhythms start from the moment of birth, as
claimed? Some do, as the moment of birth is traumatic and griping, no matter how easy the delivery. The babe must
breath, feels the cool air, is handled - all for the first time. A shock. Other biorhythms set off from the moment of
conception, and yet others when the nervous system reaches a point in its development capable of sustained activity,
such as movement, the flutter that expectant mothers refer to as feeling life.
What are biorhythms and why do they persist with such regularity? So much in life is controlled by biological
switches, the urge to eat switched on by an empty stomach, or to drink by a blood chemistry ration, or to defecate by a
full colon. And is not menstruation cyclical, the urge to sleep, the sex drive? Biorhythms, however, are not influenced
by factors outside of themselves. They hear only their own rhythm, and listen only to the note they sing. Unlike brain