The brief history of the Planet- the Earth
There is no denying the fact that at the outset of earth's history, this
planet was a giant, red hot, roiling, boiling sea of molten rock - a magma
ocean. The heat had been stimulated by the reiterated high speed collisions of much smaller bodies
of space rocks that continually clumped together as they collided to form this
planet. As the collisions tapered off the earth began to cool, forming a thin
crust on its surface. As the cooling continued, water vapor began to escape and
condense in the earth's early atmosphere. Clouds formed and storms raged,
raining more and more water down on the primitive earth, cooling the surface
further until it was flooded with water, forming the seas.
It is theorized that the true age of
the earth is about 4.6 billion years old, formed at about the same time as the
rest of our solar
system. The oldest rocks geologists have
been able to find are 3.9 billion years old. Using radiometric dating
methods to determine the age of rocks means scientists have to rely on when the
rock was initially formed (as in - when its internal minerals first cooled). In
the infancy of our home planet the entire earth was molten rock - a magma
ocean.
Since we can only measure as far
back in time as we had solid rock on this planet, we are limited in how we can
measure the real age of the earth. Due to the forces of plate
tectonics, our planet is also a very dynamic
one; new mountains forming, old ones wearing down, volcanoes melting and
reshaping new crust. The continual changing and reshaping of the earth's
surface that involves the melting down and reconstructing of old rock has
pretty much eliminated most of the original rocks that came with earth when it
was newly formed. So the age is a theoretical age.
When Did Life on Earth
Begin?
Scientists are still trying to unravel one of
the greatest mysteries of earth: When did "life" first appear and how
did it happen? It is estimated that the first life forms on earth were
primitive, one-celled creatures that appeared about 3 billion years ago.
That's pretty much all there was for about the next two billion years. Then
suddenly those single celled organisms
began to evolve into multicellular organisms. Then an unprecedented profusion
of life in incredibly complex forms began to fill the oceans. Some crawled from
the seas and took residence on land, perhaps to escape predators
in the ocean. A cascading chain of new and increasingly differentiated forms of
life appeared all over the planet, only to be virtually annihilated by an
unexplained mass extinction. It would be the first of several mass extinctions
in Earth's history.
Scientists have been looking
increasingly to space to explain these mass extinctions that have been
happening almost like clockwork since the beginning of "living" time.
Perhaps we've been getting periodically belted by more space rocks (ie.
asteroids), or the collision of neutron stars happening too close for comfort?
Each time a mass extinction occurred, life found a way to come back from the
brink. Life has tenaciously clung to this small blue planet for the last three
billion years. Scientists are finding new cues as to how life first began on
earth in some really interesting places - the deep ocean.
Checking the Fossil Record
Scientists have studied rocks using radiometric
dating methods to determine the age of earth. Another really cool thing they've
found in rocks that tells us more about the story of earth's past are the
remains of living creatures that have been embedded in the rocks for all time.
We call these fossils. It has been the careful study of earth's fossil record
that has revealed the exciting picture about the kinds of creatures that once
roamed this planet. Fossilized skeletons of enormous creatures with huge claws
and teeth, ancient ancestors of modern day species (such as sharks) that have
remained virtually unchanged for millions of years, and prehistoric jungles
lush with plant life, all point to a profusion of life and a variety of species
that continues to populate the earth, even in the face of periodic mass
extinctions.
By studying the fossil record
scientists have determined that the earth has experienced very different
climates in the past. In fact, general climactic conditions, as well as
existing species, are used to define distinct geologic time periods in earth's
history. For example, periodic warming of the earth - during the Jurassic and Cretaceous
periods - created a profusion of plant and animal life that left behind
generous organic materials from their decay. These layers of organic material
built up over millions of years undisturbed. They were eventually covered by
younger, overlying sediment and compressed, giving us fossil fuels such as
coal, petroleum and natural gas.
In view of the above, it is obvious
that alternately, the earth's climate has also experienced periods of extremely
cold weather for such procrastinated periods that much of the surface was
covered in thick sheets of ice. These periods of geologic time are called ice
ages and the earth has had several in its history. Entire species of
warmer-climate species died out during these time periods, giving rise to entirely
new species of living things which could tolerate and survive in the extremely
cold climate. Believe it or not, humans were around during the last ice age -
the Holocene (about 11,500 years ago) - and we managed to survive. Creatures
like the Woolly Mammoth - a distant relative of modern-day elephants - did not.
It is possible to explore about a really
exciting recent find of a perfectly-preserved, frozen
Woolly Mammoth! This was a particularly exciting
find because it wasn't a fossil that scientists found, but actual tissue, which
still has its DNA record intact. Also, read more about the Ice
Man - another frozen tissue sample of a
human being who was frozen into the high mountains of France. He was just
recently discovered as thousands of years of ice pack have finally melted from
around his body. Hence James Jeans says that life seems to be an utterly by
product and the creation of universe is to an explosion which is sudden.
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