Bump!
I love this thread.
wiimaster, I agree with your idea

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wiimaster wrote:
Macinjosh wrote:
JeanTheFox wrote:
It didn't really "get" to earth so much as it "came" with earth.
The human (homo sapiens) has evolved and become more intelligent through a series of evolutions that began with the smallest cell.
The cell continually multiplied to create full functioning bodies like a general fish. Eventually the general fish developed limbs and was able to travel from land to water, becoming the first amphibians. Finally the amphibians developed lungs due to the amount of time exploring on land. They became reptiles, and developed scales to protect them from the sun. As you can see, some species of fish, amphibians, and reptiles were left behind.
At this point, the reptiles were still cold-blooded. They needed to lie in the sun for a while to warm up. To become more practical, the reptiles developed warm blood. They became mammals. Some developed thumbs, and others went in their own direction. Eventually the monkey developed itself, and we came from it. We became early cavemen. We started to walk erect due to the shifting of our vertebrae. After a while, we lost the lots of bodily hair due to shelter during winter, and our teeth became smaller in both amount and size because of cooked food.
I'm not exactly an expert, sorry for the rough description![]()
no ur wrong, the earth was entirely a sea of lava then pummeled with very heavy rain and junk at the beginnin of it. not possible for life to survive no matter how small, so how did the first cells arrive on earths
NO. You are not keeping this respectful! You can't say people are wrong. Honestly, Nobody has proven anything yet, and its JUST OPINIONS! O-P-I-N-I-O-N-S! Gawsh!
It is not proven it was a sea of lava, so you can't say that!
My theory:
I think it was all water at first. Just small cells 'came' with earth when it was made, in the water. They slowly grew, and adapted, and changed to be different. They evolved.
Meanwhile, underneath all that water, tectonic plates were shifting. Some collided, buckled and created underwater hills. Then, as more plates shifted, land was formed.
The cells (Who were probably fish now. This was thousands of years past already) adapted to be on land. And then, they split even more and advanced to make animals what they are today.
That is my opinion. Anyone agree?
Uhh.. this is science, you actually can say people are wrong if they are wrong... Also it's not opinions. Opinions can't be wrong, but if I said it was my opinion that a giant elf pushes the sun around the world, that would be wrong.
Do you think a planet full of water just appeared out of nowhere? Here's a horrible retelling of how a planet like Earth can form:
Through space, a small rock flies. It becomes really hot from friction, and its outer layer melts. It crashes into other rocks, heating them up as well. It's flying around the mass of hydrogen that is our sun, crashing into other rocks until it become big. Various elements in the mass of rocks lead it to heat up, making it melt into lava. The rocks pile up over this lava until eventually they stop melting. The size of the rock is so big now, gravity pulls it in, making it spherical. Hydrogen and oxygen collect in the air and through many extreme conditions, form into water vapour in the sky. Below, there's a sea of lava. The water becomes clouds which eventually rain, cooling the Earth. This process repeats until water floods the land. The rock below cracks and a volcano is born. Over millions of years, the magma from below spills out into the water, building up land masses. Now we have an early Pangaea. However, there's no way life can just come with the planet. So then how did we get here?
Last edited by Ace-Of-Diamonds (2010-09-16 20:58:03)
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Ace-Of-Diamonds wrote:
wiimaster wrote:
Macinjosh wrote:
no ur wrong, the earth was entirely a sea of lava then pummeled with very heavy rain and junk at the beginnin of it. not possible for life to survive no matter how small, so how did the first cells arrive on earths
NO. You are not keeping this respectful! You can't say people are wrong. Honestly, Nobody has proven anything yet, and its JUST OPINIONS! O-P-I-N-I-O-N-S! Gawsh!
It is not proven it was a sea of lava, so you can't say that!
My theory:
I think it was all water at first. Just small cells 'came' with earth when it was made, in the water. They slowly grew, and adapted, and changed to be different. They evolved.
Meanwhile, underneath all that water, tectonic plates were shifting. Some collided, buckled and created underwater hills. Then, as more plates shifted, land was formed.
The cells (Who were probably fish now. This was thousands of years past already) adapted to be on land. And then, they split even more and advanced to make animals what they are today.
That is my opinion. Anyone agree?Uhh.. this is science, you actually can say people are wrong if they are wrong... Also it's not opinions. Opinions can't be wrong, but if I said it was my opinion that a giant elf pushes the sun around the world, that would be wrong.
Do you think a planet full of water just appeared out of nowhere? Here's a horrible retelling of how a planet like Earth can form:
Through space, a small rock flies. It becomes really hot from friction, and its outer layer melts. It crashes into other rocks, heating them up as well. It's flying around the mass of hydrogen that is our sun, crashing into other rocks until it become big. Various elements in the mass of rocks lead it to heat up, making it melt into lava. The rocks pile up over this lava until eventually they stop melting. The size of the rock is so big now, gravity pulls it in, making it spherical. Hydrogen and oxygen collect in the air and through many extreme conditions, form into water vapour in the sky. Below, there's a sea of lava. The water becomes clouds which eventually rain, cooling the Earth. This process repeats until water floods the land. The rock below cracks and a volcano is born. Over millions of years, the magma from below spills out into the water, building up land masses. Now we have an early Pangaea. However, there's no way life can just come with the planet. So then how did we get here?
Technically, you can't prove anything.
Last edited by Kileymeister (2010-09-16 21:08:36)
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God made the earth.
Evolution happened.
Glaciers made Minnesota what it is now.
That's all there is to say about life at this point.

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Ace-Of-Diamonds wrote:
wiimaster wrote:
Macinjosh wrote:
no ur wrong, the earth was entirely a sea of lava then pummeled with very heavy rain and junk at the beginnin of it. not possible for life to survive no matter how small, so how did the first cells arrive on earthsNO. You are not keeping this respectful! You can't say people are wrong. Honestly, Nobody has proven anything yet, and its JUST OPINIONS! O-P-I-N-I-O-N-S! Gawsh!
It is not proven it was a sea of lava, so you can't say that!
My theory:
I think it was all water at first. Just small cells 'came' with earth when it was made, in the water. They slowly grew, and adapted, and changed to be different. They evolved.
Meanwhile, underneath all that water, tectonic plates were shifting. Some collided, buckled and created underwater hills. Then, as more plates shifted, land was formed.
The cells (Who were probably fish now. This was thousands of years past already) adapted to be on land. And then, they split even more and advanced to make animals what they are today.
That is my opinion. Anyone agree?Uhh.. this is science, you actually can say people are wrong if they are wrong... Also it's not opinions. Opinions can't be wrong, but if I said it was my opinion that a giant elf pushes the sun around the world, that would be wrong.
Do you think a planet full of water just appeared out of nowhere? Here's a horrible retelling of how a planet like Earth can form:
Through space, a small rock flies. It becomes really hot from friction, and its outer layer melts. It crashes into other rocks, heating them up as well. It's flying around the mass of hydrogen that is our sun, crashing into other rocks until it become big. Various elements in the mass of rocks lead it to heat up, making it melt into lava. The rocks pile up over this lava until eventually they stop melting. The size of the rock is so big now, gravity pulls it in, making it spherical. Hydrogen and oxygen collect in the air and through many extreme conditions, form into water vapour in the sky. Below, there's a sea of lava. The water becomes clouds which eventually rain, cooling the Earth. This process repeats until water floods the land. The rock below cracks and a volcano is born. Over millions of years, the magma from below spills out into the water, building up land masses. Now we have an early Pangaea. However, there's no way life can just come with the planet. So then how did we get here?
You don't know if they are wrong. Nobody knows how earth was created. I highly doubt YOU know the answer when many scientists don't.
Ace-of-Diamonds wrote:
However, there's no way life can just come with the planet. So then how did we get here?
My opinion: Water creates its own mosses and algaes I think. Little cells and life forms were in those. Then, they evolved.
Also, how the watery planet came, well... I believe it was like this:
In space, many particles are floating around. Mostly tiny water particles. Some parts of space, lets say, have more attraction and magnetic stuff and the particles of metal, and water, are dragged there. After millions of years, it all gathers and forms a planet, that keeps expanding.

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wiimaster wrote:
Ace-Of-Diamonds wrote:
wiimaster wrote:
NO. You are not keeping this respectful! You can't say people are wrong. Honestly, Nobody has proven anything yet, and its JUST OPINIONS! O-P-I-N-I-O-N-S! Gawsh!
It is not proven it was a sea of lava, so you can't say that!
My theory:
I think it was all water at first. Just small cells 'came' with earth when it was made, in the water. They slowly grew, and adapted, and changed to be different. They evolved.
Meanwhile, underneath all that water, tectonic plates were shifting. Some collided, buckled and created underwater hills. Then, as more plates shifted, land was formed.
The cells (Who were probably fish now. This was thousands of years past already) adapted to be on land. And then, they split even more and advanced to make animals what they are today.
That is my opinion. Anyone agree?Uhh.. this is science, you actually can say people are wrong if they are wrong... Also it's not opinions. Opinions can't be wrong, but if I said it was my opinion that a giant elf pushes the sun around the world, that would be wrong.
Do you think a planet full of water just appeared out of nowhere? Here's a horrible retelling of how a planet like Earth can form:
Through space, a small rock flies. It becomes really hot from friction, and its outer layer melts. It crashes into other rocks, heating them up as well. It's flying around the mass of hydrogen that is our sun, crashing into other rocks until it become big. Various elements in the mass of rocks lead it to heat up, making it melt into lava. The rocks pile up over this lava until eventually they stop melting. The size of the rock is so big now, gravity pulls it in, making it spherical. Hydrogen and oxygen collect in the air and through many extreme conditions, form into water vapour in the sky. Below, there's a sea of lava. The water becomes clouds which eventually rain, cooling the Earth. This process repeats until water floods the land. The rock below cracks and a volcano is born. Over millions of years, the magma from below spills out into the water, building up land masses. Now we have an early Pangaea. However, there's no way life can just come with the planet. So then how did we get here?You don't know if they are wrong. Nobody knows how earth was created. I highly doubt YOU know the answer when many scientists don't.
Ace-of-Diamonds wrote:
However, there's no way life can just come with the planet. So then how did we get here?
My opinion: Water creates its own mosses and algaes I think. Little cells and life forms were in those. Then, they evolved.
Also, how the watery planet came, well... I believe it was like this:
In space, many particles are floating around. Mostly tiny water particles. Some parts of space, lets say, have more attraction and magnetic stuff and the particles of metal, and water, are dragged there. After millions of years, it all gathers and forms a planet, that keeps expanding.
Don't be silly, I know everything.
Also about that thing you stated as your opinion: It's wrong. Call it your theory, I don't like giving hypotheses to 'opinions'. Water is made of Hydrogen and Oxygen, it wouldn't have moss or cells. Moss and algae grow because the spores are there, however if there are no spores, there's no growth.
About how you're saying (a planet similar to) Earth was formed: How do you explain the heat in the core then? It is gravitational attraction, not magnetic.
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