Not exact matches
Well
since Jesus left this
earth some 2000 years have occured and
history of that time can be read about (lots has happened).
Since the
history of the
earth there has not been 50 billion humans on this planet yet.
The Kingdom came to
earth when God broke into
history through Jesus, and has been here ever
since.
Within created kinds is all we will probably see with a human life time or
since we've been looking, but recorded
history is but pin point compared to the world when talking about the time we know of the
earths existence.
Throughout human
history this conflict between the «servants of Heaven» and the «servants of
earth» has gone on; but only
since the birth of the idea of Evolution (in some sort divinising the Universe) have the devotees of
earth bestirred themselves and made of their worship a true form of religion, charged with limitless hope, striving and renunciation.
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.
In order to reconstruct climate
history, it is necessary to study natural climate archives
since, in terms of
Earth's
history, humankind has only very recently begun measuring the planet.
Such craters provide a record of the solar system's early
history; a similar record on
Earth has long
since been obscured by plate tectonics, erosion and other processes.
Since 129 - Xenon is produced by radioactive decay of 129 - Iodine, these xenon isotopes put a time stamp on the formation age of the ancient parcel of mantle to within the first 100 million years of
Earth's
history.
But it's only in the last couple of hundred years,
since Steno and the first geologists and paleontologists figured out how to read the
history of the
earth, and only in the last 50 years,
since cosmologists figured out how to investigate the
history of the cosmos, that we have seen David's second chronological revolution start to unfold.
Roberto Cazzolla Gatti, who began to be interested in the role of cooperation in evolution
since 2011, when he published a controversial paper titled «Evolution is a cooperative process: the biodiversity - related niches differentiation theory (BNDT) can explain» concluded: «These theoretical findings, confirmed by empirical approaches, should motivate our species to think before it is too late about how human competition, for the first time in the
history of life on
Earth, has been systematically leading to the extinction of animals and plants.
Glaciers across the West have been melting ever
since the end of the Little Ice Age, a cool period in the
Earth's
history that ended around the close of the 19th century.
The Holocene is the name given to the last 11,700 years * of the
Earth's
history — the time
since the end of the last major glacial epoch, or «ice age.»
The
history of the Himalayas broadly fits the long - term decrease in
Earth's average temperature
since the mid-Eocene, 40 million years ago.
In 1992, two scientists discovered the first planet around another star, or exoplanet, and
since then more people have found planets than throughout all of
Earth's preceding
history.
Now, that leads us to interesting parallel — if we think we might adapted to the absence of C which almost any other living form on
Earth uses in large quantities (including microworld to some extent), that means that we could adapt to varying amount of carbohydrates [
since they are so similar], no matter how much body needs it at the specific moment in its genetic
history.
That's when the meteorite or asteroid struck prehistoric
Earth (a misnomer in this story,
since humans are both around and recording their
history — whatever, though).
Earlier this week I recently celebrated the greatest day in recent human
history, the day the
earth received my blessed presence and it's never been the same
since.
The moon,
Earth's only satellite, has been a source of mystery and wonder
since the beginning of
history.
In «Alhambra,» El - Salahi's first show with Salon 94
since becoming represented by the gallery, the 85 - year - old Sudanese legend presents paintings inspired by his recent travels to southern Spain, filled with joyful flamenco dancers, rich
earth tones, and a nod to the country's Islamic
history.
Because you dove in deep charting the
history of the first
Earth Day, I thought you could help convey a sense of how the triumphs and failures
since then might shape environmentalism over the next 40 years.
This risk has been discussed
since the 1980s, originally due to paleoclimatic data showing a number of abrupt AMOC changes in the course of
Earth's
history.
This research shows that we've experienced almost the same range of temperature change
since the beginning of the industrial revolution as over the previous 11,000 years of
Earth history — but this change happened a lot more quickly.
By Christopher Monckton of Brenchley About 18 months ago, as soon as I heard of Dr. Richard Müller's Berkeley
Earth Temperature project, I sent an email to several skeptical scientists drawing their attention to his statement that he considered his team's attempt to verify how much «global warming» had occurred
since 1750 to be one of the most important pieces of research ever to be conducted in the
history of science.
Since recorded climate observations have only been for a very short period in the billion year
history of climate on this
Earth, I am bemused by both sides of the AGW debate claiming any discernable trend either way.
Scientists dig deep into the rock and sand of the sea floor to sample
Earth's climate
history many millions of years ago,
since the oldest ice cores go back only 850,000 years.
I consider this misleading because there has never been a point in geological
history (
since the
Earth's had an atmosphere, anyway) when CO2 concentrations were 0 ppm.
«This research shows that we've experienced almost the same range of temperature change
since the beginning of the industrial revolution,» says Major, «as over the previous 11,000 years of
Earth history — but this change happened a lot more quickly.»
This is not surprising either,
since, unlike climate modellers, they may actually have some detailed knowledge about the
history of the
Earth.
And temperature
history also shows that
since January, 2001, the temperature of the
Earth has basically held almost flat.»
Global Warming «is rapidly morphing into the greatest scandal in the
history of science
since the belief in a flat
earth» http://pajamasmedia.com/rogerlsimon/2010/01/24/climategate-the-scandal-that-keeps-on-giving-even-here-in-austin/
Our best inference from various proxies back indicate that CO2 was higher for the first 4 billion years of
Earth's
history than it has been
since the Cambrian Period until today.
This animation shows the yearly
history of
Earth's temperature
since the modern record began in 1880.
If we built a rollercoaster that matched the shape of a graph of
Earth's temperature
history since the end of the last ice age, the track up the latest hill would be nearly vertical.
If we would choose to define the era of «un-natural» as being that part of
earth's
history since the appearance on it of the mammalian species; homo sapiens sapiens; then clearly anything that happened to climate prior to that time falls into the realm of the range of natural variability; by definition;
since no non natural influencing mechanism is known prior to that time.