In 2013 two Khazak scientists, Vladimir I shCherbak and Maxim A Makukov, published their discovery of certain highly design-like arithmetical patterns in the genetic code behind all of life on earth. Comparing them to the famous 1977 “Wow! signal” detected by the Big Ear radio telescope in the US, they argued that the existence of these patterns can only be plausibly explained as an intentional sign to future discoverers that life on Earth was artificially seeded by an advanced nonhuman intelligence. This book provides overwhelming evidence in support of this hypothesis. For the first time, it documents the incredible discoveries that its author made while investigating those original patterns. These include further equally-design-like surface features of a similar nature located in obvious rearrangements of the same parts of the genetic code. But more significantly, they also include an algorithmic key that was signposted by aspects of the most surprising of the original patterns. It is the wealth of astonishing discoveries made through the application of that key that constitutes the overwhelming evidence that this book reveals - evidence that is published here for the first time in a context that allows readers to easily check it out for themselves. There are not just copious examples of design-like subsurface structures where the inspiration is evident from the associated surface features, but the nature of the key ensures statistical significance and rules out a natural origin for these structures. Their sheer abundance all but proves that the genetic code is artificial. However, it also suggests that its creator possessed abilities way beyond those that would be within the reach of any planet-based civilization. This book will introduce you to the genetic code and explain the discoveries of shCherbak & Makukov and C. S. Morrison in an accessible way that does not require any prior knowledge of the subject. You will not need any backgound in molecular biology or genetics, of which there is very little in this book anyway. That is because the subject matter is the genetic code itself (it is not the molecules that it codes for or how it functions within a cell). It is the mapping between the sixty-four three-letter words (codons) that form the vocabulary of the DNA molecule and their twenty-one possible meanings (the twenty amino-acid building blocks of biological proteins and the "stop" command). Although these are molecules, one does not need to learn anything about them other than their weights in natural units of nucleon numbers (the numbers of protons and neutrons they usually contain - which is their atomic mass rounded down to a whole number) and which three-letter word codes for them. This does not take much time to explain, so most of the book is focussed on showing the non-biological intelligent-like signal that appears to be encoded. As with the discoveries of shCherbak & Makukov, anyone with a basic grasp of arithmetic will be able to verify those discoveries for themselves (and potentially make new ones). The crucial difference in this book is C. S. Morrison's discovery of a key - a dual-output arithmetical procedure justified by the context that ought to yield random answers. The astonishing thing is that when fed the salient inputs suggested by the genetic code, its two outputs (which ought to be random) are almost always surprisingly closely related to those inputs. Moreover, their relationship is usually of obvious statistical significance and intelligent-like character. Since that applies to both outputs simultaneously, one cannot put it down to an accident.