To the best of my ability I write about my experience of the Universe Past, Present and Future
Thursday, October 24, 2024
If earth was first colonized by Humans when the Larger Dinosaurs died
Then this changes a lot of what people consider to be history here on earth.
What interests me about people coming from Maldek and Mars to colonize earth after Maldek blew up and made Mars' surface uninhabitable, they needed somewhere local in the Solar system for the survivors to move to. and once the larger dinosaurs were eliminated with the Meteor from Maldek hitting the Yucatan Peninsula (presently the Asteroid Belt) 65 million years ago or so), humanoids could come to earth. However, their bodies were adapted to different environments than earth so even though they could survive here they couldn't survive here well. So, they created a hybrid between their genetics and the apes here on earth to help serve them, us.
So, when they all died off or interbred with us we were left alone here on earth to fend for ourselves. If you wonder how we all survived the Ice Ages all you have to do is to look at Eskimos in Alaska or Canada or Greenland to understand how we accomplished that. However, likely we lost our space travel and other higher technologies through the ice ages if they lasted very long because most of us likely died off in trying to adapt to ice ages and floods like Noah's Ark or things like oceans rising and hurricanes and droughts like we are dealing with now here on earth through Global Warming and Global Climate changes.
I was also listening to how the earth was once a water planet like I write about where there were no continents except Volcanic vent islands then too. So, I found this interesting too.
According to scientific evidence, Earth was likely a "water world" with no visible continents around 3.2 billion years ago, meaning most of the planet's surface was covered by a global ocean with very little, if any, exposed landmass;essentially a planet with no continents as we know them today.
Key points about this theory:
Evidence from ancient ocean crust:
Scientists
study the chemical signatures of ancient ocean crust, now exposed on
land, to analyze oxygen isotope ratios which indicate the presence of a
vast ocean with no significant landmasses at that time.
Research location:
Studies analyzing this ancient ocean crust have been conducted in the Australian outback.
Impact on early life:
This
"water world" scenario may have significantly influenced the
development of early life on Earth, as most life would have existed in
the ocean.
1.5 billion-year-old Earth had water everywhere, but not one ...
Mar
2, 2020 — And the ratio between these two oxygen isotopes hinted that
at the time, there were no continents at all, the study fou...
Live Science
Earth may have been a 'water world' 3bn years ago, scientists find | Science | The Guardian
Mar 2, 2020
The Guardian
Earth Was Once a Water World! | Youngzine
Mar
9, 2020 — University of Colorado Boulder researcher Boswell Wing and
Iowa State University researcher Benjamin Johnson found evid...
Youngzine
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While modern Earth's surface is about 70 percent water-covered, the new research indicates that our planet was a true ocean world some 3 billion years ago. At this point, only scattered archipelagos breached our global ocean's briny surface. That is, if any land existed at all.Mar 6, 2020
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