Sentences with phrase «earth history into»

The game compresses four and a half billion years of Earth history into a single minute, letting players become high - speed time travelers and race through the geologic ages at breakneck speed.

Not exact matches

Notice that life only occurred 1 time in earths history - IE biology show all life shares 1 common ancestor, but if life is naturally occurring shouldn't there be several different life forms that randomly came into existence and separate (not having any connections) from other life forms?
The periods of world history are divided into epochs, each of which is accentuated by the growth and decline of historical cultures and societies; in each of these shortlived tribal units have succeeded each other in the domination of a given region or section of the populated earth, either simply co-existing or vying with each other for temporary or semipermanent superiority.
nice question — there was indeed a global ocean in earths history and it was salt water — according to modern science when the plates moved and enclosed land creating a land locked ocean which over time turn to fresh water by leaking the salt into the bedrock... or something like that — i have rough understanding.
«Maybe we are facing a new and different kind of epoch in the church's history where Christianity will be characterized more by the mustard seed, where it will exist in small, seemingly insignificant groups that nonetheless live an intensive struggle against evil and bring the good into the world - that let God in,» he told Peter Seewald in an interview for the book, «Salt of the Earth: Christianity and the Catholic Church at the End of the Millenium.»
So Peter with an extraordinary completeness presents us with the Christ who pre-existed in history and before history began (1:10, 11, 20), the Christ who came to this earth and who suffered and died for men on the cross (1:16 - 22; 2:24), the Christ who descended into Hades and so tasted the full bitterness of death (3:19), the Christ who rose from death (1:3, 21; 3:21), the Christ who ascended into glory (1:11; 3:22), and the Christ who will come again (1:7, 13; 4:7; 5:1, 4).
Teilhard envisions that the processive realization in history of the atonement actualized in Christ will proceed to a threshold of sudden change, much like the «quantum leap» in which life first emerged on earth, and there will emerge a total humanity newly unified into an «organism» about Christ, the center of centers (PM 288ff.).
The Kingdom came to earth when God broke into history through Jesus, and has been here ever since.
Over the course of the Earth's four billion year history, billions of other species have evolved into existence and been rendered extinct by compet - itors or natural disasters, well before the current cast of characters appeared.
A famous attempt was trying to squeeze the geological periods of the earth's history into the six days of creation; another is the attempt to identify the Christmas star with a planet or comet.
He assumed that the study of the teaching of Jesus `... has an independent interest of its own and a definite interest of its own and a definite task of its own, namely, that we use every resource we possess of knowledge, of historical imagination, and of religious insight to the one end of transporting ourselves back into the centre of the greatest crisis in the world's history, to look as it were through the eyes of Jesus and to see God and man, heaven and earth, life and death, as he saw them, and to find, if we may, in that vision something which will satisfy the whole man in mind and heart and will».
Believe it or not, even if the Knicks were trapped in a sinkhole and disappeared into the earth, the Hawks fell through the time - space continuum and the Cavaliers didn't win another game, yet made the playoffs by default, there would still be three playoff teams in NBA history that had worse records.
Since light from distant objects takes time to reach Earth, the deeper you look into the sky, the further back into the history of the universe you see.
The island is one of the best places to peer into the history of Earth's magnetic field because its fluctuations are recorded in the ancient volcanic rock.
The rare spectacle of a total solar eclipse has given scientists throughout history fleeting opportunities to delve into everything from the sun's chemistry to Einsteinian relativity to Earth's place in the solar system.
Author David J. Smith has found clever devices to scale down everything from time lines (the history of Earth compressed into one year), to quantities (all the wealth in the world divided into one hundred coins), to size differences (the planets shown as different types of balls).
On April 24, 1990, the Hubble Space Telescope rode a space shuttle into low Earth orbit to become the most productive observatory in history.
We have to go very far back into the geological history of the Earth to find a climate that is as warm as what we are heading towards.
This research, which can be read in Scientific Reports, completely calls into question the scientific theories regarding these phenomena, founded on the increase of CO2 in the atmosphere, and paves the way for a new vision of Earth's climate history.
At various points in Earth's history, dust fell into the ocean and fed algae, which gobbled up carbon dioxide and sank to the bottom of the sea, taking greenhouse gas with them and cooling the world.
An understanding of how tectonic, erosional and climatic forces interact to shape mountains permits clearer insights into the earth's history
Big history puts the history of the cosmos, the history of the earth, the history of life, and the history of humanity together into a single narrative.
Identification of a gene needed to expand light harvesting in photosynthesis into the far - red - light spectrum provides clues to the development of oxygen - producing photosynthesis, an evolutionary advance that changed the history of life on Earth.
The current climate is influenced by processes that go far back into the history of Earth: the Greenland lithosphere is 2.8 to 1.7 billion years old and is only about 70 to 80 kilometers thick under Central Greenland.
The results, published July 30 in Nature, provide insights into the moon's early history, its orbital evolution, and its current orientation in the sky, according to lead author Ian Garrick - Bethell, assistant professor of Earth and planetary sciences at UC Santa Cruz.
The results of Schaller, Fung and his team will prompt further investigations into the possible influence of an impact event on the global environmental change that characterized this notable warming period in Earth's ancient history.
Studying the craters on the moon offers a window into that violent history of the young solar system that is not nearly as accessible on Earth.
Months after a request from a Virginia politician and a conservative think tank, the University of Virginia (UVA) has turned over documents related to embattled scientist Michael Mann's research into the history of Earth's climate.
These high - fidelity simulations add context to ongoing debates related to Earth's geologic history and dynamics, bringing prominent features like tectonic plates, magma plumes, and hotspots into view.
Paleoclimatologists instead look into Earth's history to a time when the planet was warmer than it is today, about 3 million years ago.
«Our study also allows us to put our 21st century temperatures into the context of Earth's history.
Walter's recent research has focused on the period early in Earth's history, shortly after the planet accreted from the cloud of gas and dust surrounding our young Sun, when the mantle and the core first separated into distinct layers.
Can anyone else put the claim (below) into the context of this»... unprecedented window into the history of life on Earth
Asteroids and other space debris left over from the solar system's creation regularly slammed into Earth early in its history.
The researchers also looked back into the Earth's history, and found that we narrowly missed descending into an ice age a few hundred years ago.
For hydrogen in Earth's early history to have arrived and stayed put in great enough amounts to bond with the oxygen in Earth's atmosphere, it must have been attached to a «carrier» — another atom that bound it into a molecule.
In addition to providing a new perspective into the history of Earth, the discovery is also expected to provide significant insights into the study of planetary habitability.
Along with tree rings and ice cores, which offer a window into land temperatures throughout Earth's history, these are all examples of «climate proxies».
While water molecules were part of the cloud of gas and dust that coalesced into our solar system 4.6 billion years ago, Earth's early history included scorching temperatures and little - to - no atmosphere, so it was thought that any water on the planet's surface would likely have evaporated.
«This expedition offered insights into Earth's history, ranging from mountain - building in New Zealand to the shifting movements of Earth's tectonic plates to changes in ocean circulation and global climate.»
«Each recovered fossil helps us to understand the ecosystem at that time and offers a detailed view into the life history on earth,» explains Professor Dr. Ralf - Dietrich Kahlke of the Senckenberg Research Station for Quaternary Paleontology in Weimar, and he continues, «The diversity of the more than 17,000 specimens retrieved to date ranges from a tiny frog skeleton to the largest known cheetahs in geological history
These gems have thousands — sometimes millions — of years of the Earth's history stored within them that you can harness to tap into your most magnificent self.
The new edition contains 487 pages with 658 citations drawing from a vast variety of scientific disciplines, dipping deep into past history and far across the geography of the globe, and considering science from the tiniest subatomic particles to the ecosystems of the Earth.
Whether it's a piece of the Russian collection or a pair of discontinued eyewear, to each of these women, it's knowing the history of a piece, its lineage, perhaps, the fact that it may very well be the last of its kind on earth, and an appreciation for the sweat and tears that went into its design that makes vintage so valuable.
With Trudell's lifeline as the narrative thread, this biopic journeys in and out of modern Indian history and politics, exploring the earth - infused philosophy and motivations of Trudell's radical acts and thought, as well as reliving the loss and heartache that prompted his activism to evolve abruptly into artistic expression.
According to the publisher, the series is «returning to its roots» for a classic battle of two armies that, for the first time in franchise history, extends beyond Earth into the solar system.
12:30 - 1:30 pm, Room 8 - Middle - Earth: Shadow of Mordor Taking place between The Hobbit and Lord of the Rings, Middle - Earth: Shadow of Mordor will give fans a look into the history between the Rings of Power and the Wraiths.
But I'm also happy that Jackson's Middle Earth is one where more than two named female characters in the entire history of the setting have ridden into battle alongside men.
It plugs bears and moose into a formula already plumbed Disney - style with lions and meerkats (and once before again with Earth Children stereotypes of Native Americans), boiling an entire culture and mythology down to an insultingly reductive pastiche and taking swipes at women along the way to telling one of the most inapplicable codas in the history of fable: «The story of a boy who became a man by becoming a bear.»
Chronicling pilot Chuck Yeager's breaking the sound barrier and the Mercury space program in which the first Americans were sent into space and to orbit the earth (the Russians beat them to it - in case you haven't been paying attention in your History classes), The Right Stuff is, well, fascinating stuff.
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