Sentences with phrase «look billions of years old»

Not exact matches

Grail, a year - old, Menlo Park, Ca. - based early cancer screening startup that spun out of the DNA - sequencing giant Illumina is reportedly looking to raise up to $ 1.7 billion in fresh funding to launch a large - scale clinical trial.
[2:17] What is your idea of an extraordinary life [2:43] You can be rich and happy, or rich and angry [3:08] It's about defining what life on your terms looks like [3:18] Nothing worse than an angry rich man or woman [3:24] We have a 2 billion - year old brain: focused on fight or flight, and survival [4:14] We don't appreciate enough.
But your example of them saying the earth is 6000 years old but looks 3.5 billion is different from the Catholics accepting evolution.
That is not to say that Mr. Ham is wrong, maybe that is exactly what God did and just made it look like the universe was billions of years old.
5 — You are willing to spend your life looking for little loopholes in the scientifically established age of Earth (few billion years), but you find nothing wrong with believing dates recorded by Bronze Age tribesmen sitting in their tents and guessing that Earth is a few generations old.
He who can do all things can make a 6000 year old earth look like billions of years old, just so those who refuse to love the truth will be deluded (paraphrase of Apostle Paul's words.)
Using a new analytical technique, the team looked at different kinds of chondrite meteorites, a type of primitive meteorite approximately 4.6 billion years old.
«If that is true, then if we look at older fossil assemblages — say 1 to 1.6 billion years old — the fossilized eukaryote will show no evidence of predation,» Porter said.
«We think what we're looking at is several billion years old,» Dietrich says of the region around Gale Crater.
Led by Sandra Savaglio and Karl Glazebrook of Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, Maryland, the team studied a few hundred galaxies at distances of some 10 billion light - years, looking back to a time when the universe was only about 4 billion years old.
Now research from the University of Washington looking at some of the planet's oldest rocks finds evidence that 3.2 billion years ago, life was already pulling nitrogen out of the air and converting it into a form that could support larger communities.
To look deeper into Earth's past, the team went to the Jack Hills region of Western Australia, which is famous for its four - billion - year - old zircon crystals.
Earth is billions of years old and billions of people have lived here so far, and yet this simple, unhappy - looking graduate student is the first organism in history to know about the interaction between these proteins.
The cluster is more than 12 billion years old, which means the stars that the researchers looked at formed only a few hundred million years after the death of first - generation stars.
Young stars that are from a few million to one billion years old and appear to have a disk of dust and debris orbiting them may be the best place to look for giant exoplanets.
The universe is 13.7 billion years old, and so at a distance of 10 billion light years, we're looking back in time some 70 percent of the age of the universe.
Look, at the end of the day, Earth is 4.5 billion years old and had a great life.
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