The longest living populations on
planet Earth today live on starch - based (low - animal food) diets.
They're growing food on
planet Earth today... but in their lifetime, who knows where these skills will take them?
If your idea of a top class striker is CFs like Aguero, Suarez, Lewandowski, Ibrahimovich and maybe Higuain, then yes, there are only a handful of such top class strikers existing on
planet earth today.
Yet, strangely, on
planet Earth today we find tens of millions of people dying of starvation every year.
In response, I wrote and distributed throughout our church a little pamphlet called «Attending the Church that God Does» explaining that if Jesus were walking
planet earth today, ours was the kind of church He would attend.
It seemed only logical: If Jesus was walking around
Planet Earth today, He would be helping lots of sick people — and especially people with AIDS.
Of the 7.3 billion human beings on
Planet Earth today, 89 percent are religious believers, while 1.8 percent are professed atheists and another 9 percent are agnostics: which suggests that Chief Poobah of the New Atheists Richard Dawkins and his friends are not exactly winning the day, although their «market share» is up from 1900.
Not exact matches
Today, Mars is the most studied
planet in the universe (after
Earth).
More human beings are alive
today on
Planet Earth than the total until 1900, and most of them are living at a level that we can only call sub-human.
4s) then photons erupted from this energy cloud (detectable
today as the microwave background radiation) 5s) photons and other particles form the bodies of the early universe (atoms, molecules, stars,
planets, galaxies) 6s) it rained on the early
earth until it was cool enough for oceans to form 7s) the first life form was blue green bacteria.
Man has killed man — all n name of God... holier than thou and result is that
today we are standing on edge of destruction - destruction so huge that even possibility of extinction from
planet earth is looking at our faces!
Explicitly or by inference they talk as though Man
today had reached a final and supreme state of humanity beyond which he can not advance; or, in the language of this lecture, that, Matter having attained in Homo sapiens its maximum of centro - complexity on
Earth, the process of super-molecularization on the
planet has for good and all come to a stop.
what is necessary and a very important change for us
today and the future is our conscience, and this requires global consciousness necessary for our long term needs and survival, we need a faith that will compel us to unite to address the problems of survival, in the future, a few thousand years from now the glacial period cycle is due,
earth will no longer be hospitable and we either have to immigrate to other
planets or, develope a system that will protect us, the natural calamities like floods, typhoons, sub zero temperatures, will become our big problem in the future, so we need a religion that will guide our conscience from simplistic self survival towards a more holistic view of reality.Our oneness with ourselves and Him is the primary tenets or doctrines of this religion.
Some of these planetesimals became the embryonic forms of the
planets in our solar system
today, the
Earth being one of them.
How can you logically believe that Noah and his family managed to fit two of every animal on
Earth (and the food to keep them all alive, not to mention how did they deal with all the poo from the thousands of animals, also... the travel necessary to accomplish such an illogical feat could not have been accomplished in one lifetime, even with
today's travel technnology) in an ark that was 300 cubits x 50 cubits x 30 cubits (450 ft x 75 ft x 45 ft) and also believe that the 8 people that survived the «global flood» on the ark repopulated the
planet?
Today we are struggling for the survival not only of human civilization, but for survival of life on the
planet Earth.
4) then photons erupted from this energy 4) let there be LIGHT (1 - 4 all the first day) cloud (detectable
today as the microwave background radiation) 5) photons and other particles form the 5) God next creates the heavens (what we call the sky) above bodies of the early universe (atoms, (2nd day) molecules, stars,
planets, galaxies) 6) it rained on the early
earth until it was 6) dry land appears as the oceans form (3rd day) cool enough for oceans to form 7) the first life form was blue green bacteria.
And the best sci - fi show on television
today is Battlestar Galactica, a «reimagining» of a short - lived late - 1970s series about the last remnants of humanity fleeing a genocide perpetrated by their own creations — a race of humanoid robots called Cylons — and searching for our species» last refuge, a mythical
planet called
Earth.
And yes every man women and child on
planet earth knew Wenger was in Rome
today, and about 10 hours ago at that.
Ozil, is so frustrating, as
today he looked as good a player as is on
planet earth but last week, well it must have been his grandad who was wearing his shirt, not him, All that prodigious talent but so very often wasted through just not enough regular fight.
Parents
today can be some of the most annoying people on
Planet Earth.
And the fact that
Earth's spin rate wasn't slowing down as quickly then as it is
today hints that our
planet had little or no ocean to slosh about and slow down our
planet's spin rate for its first 500 million years, the findings suggest.
Assuming a rotation rate similar to
today, the
planet could have had a habitable climate until at least 715 million years ago (SN Online: 8/26/16), even if Venus got 70 percent more sunlight than
Earth does now, physicist Michael Way of NASA's Goddard Institute for Space Studies in New York City and colleagues reported in 2016 in Geophysical Research Letters.
Marvel at the entire tree of life of
planet Earth, from the origin of species to
today's critters (including you)!
But the study, published
today in
Earth's Future, finds that scientists won't be able to determine, based on measurements of large - scale phenomena like global sea level and Antarctic mass changes, which scenario the
planet faces until the 2060s.
Astronomers announced
today the discovery of an extraordinary planetary system: seven
Earth - sized
planets that could all have liquid water on their rocky surfaces.
At first, they were extremely simple, resembling
today's sponges or jellyfish, but
Earth was on its way from being, for eons, a
planet less than hospitable to complex life to becoming one bursting with it.
Those impacts marked, in essence, the final stages of
Earth's development into the
planet it is
today.
As interplanetary dust is thought to have rained down on early
Earth, it is likely that the stuff brought water to our
planet, although it is difficult to conceive how it could account for the millions of cubic kilometres of water that cover
Earth today.
And it gave us an opportunity to talk about how the
planet changes and evolves and [how] what is the driest place on
Earth today hasn't always been the driest place on
Earth and that those high desert lakes were remnants of when the sea is used to be there, marine fossils and coral in that high desert.
At a NASA press conference
today that also unveiled more than 500 other new candidate
planets, Kepler's mission scientists announced they have finally found and confirmed what looks to be the mission's long - sought holy grail, a near - twin of
Earth called Kepler 452 b.
There are likely hundreds of millions of
Earth - like
planets in the Milky Way
today, but that's a small fraction of the number that may form throughout the universe in the future, a new study suggests.
That means that the remaining 61 % is available to form future solar systems that may include
Earth - like
planets in their habitable zones, the researchers report online
today in Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
Although theirs is perhaps the best - known mass extinction on
Earth, by the author's account, the dinosaurs» reign was a massive success story — they thrived on the
planet for more than 150 million years, and their descendants are the more than 10,000 species of birds that occupy almost every corner of the world
today.
Visiting other
planets is a dream that most of us alive
today will have to experience vicariously through probes like the plucky NASA Mars rovers, which have sent a thousand photo albums» worth of snapshots back to
Earth.
New research published
today in the journal Astrobiology shows the vital role of oceans in moderating climate on
Earth - like
planets.
And those five problems are climate change, petro - dictatorship — the rise of Russia, Iran, Saudi Arabia and Venezuela — energy and natural resource supply, and demand constraints, and we see that from food to fuel
today, biodiversity loss, the fact that we are right now in the middle of the sixth great extinction phase in the
Earth's history that we know of; and finally something I call energy poverty, the 1.6 billion people on the
planet we [who] still have no on - off switch in their life because they've no direct grid electricity.
And yet,
today,
Earth is a
planet that runs on H2O.
Such an ancient date required the researchers to make a few educated guesses about the early
planet, such as assuming it had a shallow ocean just 10 percent the volume of that on
Earth today.
Findings published
today in the journal Astrobiology reveal the habitable lifetime of
planet Earth - based on our distance from the sun and temperatures at which it is possible for the
planet to have liquid water.
Beyond sprinkling the
planet with riches, Willbold believes the meteor shower could have helped deliver the ingredients necessary for life: «Most of the water on
Earth today may have been brought during that late bombardment.»
It envisions the great reshuffling as a brief, violent affair that not only put the outer
planets where they are
today but also created the Kuiper belt of small icy bodies beyond Neptune, gave the
planets scores of oddly orbiting moons, and bombarded the solar system with a rain of asteroids and comets so fierce that it would have cooked all but the deepest subterranean life on early
Earth.
In a study published online
today in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, astronomers analyzing 63 hot Jupiters (depicted above) detected by NASA's Kepler spacecraft have found no
planets comparable in size to
Earth orbiting nearby.
The sediment cores used in this study cover a period when the
planet went through many climate cycles driven by variations in
Earth's orbit, from extreme glacial periods such as the Last Glacial Maximum about 20,000 years ago, when massive ice sheets covered the northern parts of Europe and North America, to relatively warm interglacial periods with climates more like
today's.
A committee of the U.S. National Research Council released a sobering report
today on the prospects for defending the home
planet against near
Earth objects (NEOs), the asteroids and comets that can cross
Earth's orbit and hit us.
Even though many of the
planets orbit their stars very closely and have high temperatures, which in turn causes their hydrogen - rich atmospheres to expand and a fraction of the gases to escape the
planet over time, it's unlikely that the
planets will lose enough of their atmosphere to become rocky bodies like
Earth, the researchers report online
today in the Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society.
As Jupiter retreated from its closest approach to the sun (about the distance of Mars's orbit
today), it left behind the mostly rocky remnants that later coalesced into our solar system's inner
planets, including
Earth.
The discovery, announced
today at a COROT symposium in Paris, is good news for NASA's Kepler mission, which will hunt for
Earth - like
planets orbiting in the habitable zones of their stars.
Scientists designed Philae and Rosetta to study the chemistry and geology of 67P, providing data that could give scientists clues to how the
planets became what they are
today and whether comets brought water and other ingredients for life to
Earth.
As the team describes
today in Astronomy & Astrophysics, the
planet they found — Ross 128 b — orbits its star in just 9.9 days at 1/20 the distance from
Earth to the sun (artist's rendition, above).