"The microfossls detected apparently represent the remains of microbial communities rather than remains of individual microorganisms; the communities were well developed and resembled cyanobacterial communities. The communities functioned in an aquatic enviroment, probably in hydrothermal volcanic activity zones.

At a conference in Denver, July 20-22, 1999, a pair scientists

from the Russian Academy of Sciences presented sharp images that

look very much like fossilized microorganisms taken from fragments

of several carbonaceous meteorites.

One of the scientists, Dr. Stanislav I. Zhmur of the Institute of the Lithosphere of Marginal Seas, RAS, wrotes;

"Comparative analysis of bacteriomorphic structures from the

carbonaceous meteorites, Murchison, Efremovka and Allende,… and

morphology of microorganisms of modern and ancient terrestrial

cyanobacterial community showed that they are analogous.

This gave us reason to consider that these bacteriomorphic structures are

fossilized remnants of microorganisms. The lithified remnants are tightly conjugated with the mineral matrix, removing the possibility that they are contaminants.

The selection of microfossils capable of being interpreted as biological is quite wide. Some of them are demonstrated in the pictures."

The photos were first published at a conference sponsored by the

International Society for Optical Engineering (SPIE), entitled

"Instruments, Methods and Missions for Astrobiology II." It was

organized by by NASA's Richard Hoover. The proceedings of the July

conference became available in December.