Category Archives: Science

How did we get here?

Ok! Alright! Sheesh.

Seems like every time I talk to a theist on-line they ask me; “Where do you think you came from?  Monkeys?  Ok, so where did those monkeys come from?” It represents a shameful lack of education.

I know that it’s really not their fault. Through religious home-schooling, and the denial of the teaching of evolution in schools due to religious teachers and school-board members, they really have not had a chance to learn the process whereby we have arrived on this planet.  That is, they are ignorant of the best explanations as put forward by the greatest minds in science:  Evolution, and how it has worked to give rise to humans on this planet.

So, let’s start at the beginning.   4.5 Billion years ago, Earth was a newly formed planet; it formed from material (rocks, dust and gas) floating in the area of space where gravity was forming a new star (our sun).  The Earth was lifeless, hot and barren; a ball of rock and molten lava due to the heat from continuous collisions with asteroids, comets and other space debris during its formation.  Floating as it was in the vast coldness of space, it began to cool; and as it cooled, it formed a solid crust on which the waters started to collect.

Where did the water come from?  Well, comets delivered billions of tons of water in the form of ice to the Earth’s surface during earth’s molten phase and later during the bombardment phase.   Once a molecule of water arrived on earth, it was destined to remain there due to Earth’s gravity.  Water vapor boiled out of the lava to collect in the atmosphere to be cooled into rain which, over time, created earth’s great oceans, rivers, lakes, and tide pools.

It was in these waters that the first complex chemicals collected, and started to interact simply due to basic chemical reactions fueled by energy from the sun, lightning in the early atmosphere, and heat from deep sea thermal vents (see Miller-Urey Experiments).  They combined,  later to break down again and reform, in a cycle that would create new compounds.  Amino acids, (which have now been found in space) landed on the earth to add to the mix and fuel new combinations.  After a while (~500 million to 1 billion years) there arose a string of amino acids that were able to replicate, i.e. make copies of themselves, from the pieces of molecules that were floating in the liquid environment.  These were the early RNA molecules.

Some of these self-replicating molecules, entirely by hit-and-miss (but predictable) chemical processes, developed an outer shell of molecules that protected them and allowed them more stability and longer life.  These shells later became cell walls, and single-celled organisms came into being.  It was within these cells that DNA evolved.

For the first 2 Billion years, there was little or no oxygen on the Earth, however there was hydrogen, helium, methane, carbon-dioxide, ammonia, water vapor and the noble gas neon.  Single-celled plants then evolved which were able to use those abundant gases during photosynthesis which produced oxygen as a by-product (waste).

“Oceanic cyanobacteria, which evolved into coordinated (but not multicellular or even colonial) macroscopic forms more than 2.3 billion years ago (approximately 200 million years before the GOE), are believed to have become the first microbes to produce oxygen by photosynthesis.”  — Wikipedia, the Great Oxygenation Event

Billions and billions of these tiny plants, over the next billion years, were able to produce the great quantities of breathable oxygen which multi-celled animals eventually evolved to use.

So, in the beginning, Earth was lifeless for nearly a billion years, and then it was populated only by these single-celled organisms for nearly 3 billion more years before they started to combine into larger collections of cells that were able to work together to more efficiently compete for the available nutrients in the water. Some of these earliest multi-celled organisms were sponges and jellyfish.  They had no senses; no eyes, no sense of smell or hearing and only a rudimentary sense of touch; but they were able to capture and digest the single-celled creatures and plants that they happened to come into contact with.

Only about ~1/2 Billion (~500 million) years ago there came a great explosion of diversity of living multi-celled plants and animals on the Earth which we call the Cambrian Explosion.  Think of it, the Earth was 4 Billion years old before the first Multi-celled creatures (plants and animals) came into being but soon the oceans were brimming with life.  However, there was still little or no life on land.

Plants were the first life to spread to the areas around the bodies of water about 435 Million years ago. Fish use oxygen just like land animals do, they just get it from  the dissolved oxygen that is in the water.  But some fish, living in low-oxygen water environments evolved the ability to also get it from the air, and it wasn’t long before they were moving onto the land. The rest is history.

From fish, to amphibians and reptiles, to mammals to man.  The entire trip from sponges-to-man took only 500 million years. It’s amazing to think that dinosaurs roamed the earth for over 150 million of those years, but Man has only been around the last ~150 thousand years (originating in Africa, spreading to Europe and Asia, and then, only came to the America’s for the first time around 15,000 years ago!).

Compared to man dinosaurs were a VERY successful branch of evolution!  Heck some of them still survive in the birds that we see flying around today.  (Crocodiles and alligators have been around for more than 180 million years, making them living dinosaurs.)

All of this was accomplished by normal, everyday chemical processes, and time; LOTS of time.  Carl Sagan once said (Paraphrasing) “WE are what the Universe does given 14.5 billion years.”

And if it happened routinely in our little neck of the woods in 4.5 billion years, it wouldn’t be a stretch to think that it might have also happened in many other regions of space over the 14.5 billion year history of the universe!

(For a more detailed breakdown of the events leading to Earth Today, please visit:
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_Earth )