7 Things We Don't Know About Earth
Δημοσιεύτηκε στις 29 Νοε 2016
Did
you know Earth might have a secret underground ocean? Are you aware
that scientists recently discovered the existence of a new species of
man? And have you been paying attention to the news that the number of
creatures on this planet just multiplied by 100,000?
Narration provided by JaM Advertising New Mexico www.tasteofjam.com
There are many weird theories regarding what lies deep down beneath the Earth's crust within our planet's mantle and core.
Jamiroquai
once sang about going deeper underground, but as he's yet to fund a
drilling project to compete with the Kola Superdeep Hole in Russia I'm
gonna call shenanegans on that funky hat-wearing little chap.
It
is widely assumed that of all the species living on Earth today, we
know about only a quarter of them, with some even pegging the figure as
low as 13%.
All modern humans contain traces of genetic material from one of Homo Sapiens long-dead ancestors - the Neanderthal.
As
well as the fact that we shouldn't lick rocks for fun, Geology also
teaches us that until 2.3 to 2.4 billion years ago the Earth had no
oxygen in its atmosphere.
Around 541 million years ago life on
Earth started to get pretty complicated, and not in an Avril Lavigne way
where creatures started acting like somebody else and they all got
frustrated.
you know Earth might have a secret underground ocean? Are you aware
that scientists recently discovered the existence of a new species of
man? And have you been paying attention to the news that the number of
creatures on this planet just multiplied by 100,000?
Narration provided by JaM Advertising New Mexico www.tasteofjam.com
There are many weird theories regarding what lies deep down beneath the Earth's crust within our planet's mantle and core.
Jamiroquai
once sang about going deeper underground, but as he's yet to fund a
drilling project to compete with the Kola Superdeep Hole in Russia I'm
gonna call shenanegans on that funky hat-wearing little chap.
It
is widely assumed that of all the species living on Earth today, we
know about only a quarter of them, with some even pegging the figure as
low as 13%.
All modern humans contain traces of genetic material from one of Homo Sapiens long-dead ancestors - the Neanderthal.
As
well as the fact that we shouldn't lick rocks for fun, Geology also
teaches us that until 2.3 to 2.4 billion years ago the Earth had no
oxygen in its atmosphere.
Around 541 million years ago life on
Earth started to get pretty complicated, and not in an Avril Lavigne way
where creatures started acting like somebody else and they all got
frustrated.
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