RE: DNA Proves Existence of a Designer
November 25, 2018 at 12:23 pm
(This post was last modified: November 25, 2018 at 12:27 pm by Everena.)
(November 25, 2018 at 12:13 pm)Peebo-Thuhlu Wrote: At work.
Uhm, technically Everena? We don't have 'Food'. We just have chemistry.
Some chemicals are 'Good' for us and we need them.
Others are neutral and don't do anything for us.
Still others will definitely fek our sh!t up.
Heck.....getting our ballance of chemicals wrong, lesser or more, can fek our sh!t up.
Waaaaay too much dihydrogenmonoxide will totally ruin your day.
Cheers.
Bullshit, we have food. It tastes great and keeps 8.7 million different species of life on this planet alive and well. Stop eating if you don't like it. Natural food is good for you. People added chemicals that are not. Grip reality soon.
(November 25, 2018 at 12:23 pm)Bucky Ball Wrote:Quote:The question is why would food exist on our planet in the first place you blathering idiot.
LMFAO ... blathering idiot.
Well, ya see sweetie, plants arose millions of years before they were "food".
You really are 12 aren't you ?
http://science.psu.edu/news-and-events/2...8-2001.htm
"The largest genetic study ever performed to learn when land plants and fungi first appeared on the Earth has revealed a plausible biological cause for two major climate events: the Snowball Earth eras, when ice periodically covered the globe, and the era called the Cambrian Explosion, which produced the first fossils of almost all major categories of animals living today.
According to the authors of the study, which will be published in the 10 August 2001 issue of the journal Science, plants paved the way for the evolution of land animals by simultaneously increasing the percentage of oxygen in the Earth's atmosphere and decreasing the percentage of carbon dioxide, a powerful greenhouse gas.
"Our research shows that land plants and fungi evolved much earlier than previously thought — before the Snowball Earth and Cambrian Explosion events — suggesting their presence could have had a profound effect on the climate and the evolution of life on Earth," says Blair Hedges, an evolutionary biologist and leader of the Penn State research team that performed the study.
The researchers found that land plants had evolved on Earth by about 700 million years ago and land fungi by about 1,300 million years ago — much earlier than previous estimates of around 480 million years ago, which were based on the earliest fossils of those organisms. Prior to this study, it was believed that Earth's landscape at that time was covered with barren rocks harboring nothing more than some bacteria and possibly some algae. No undisputed fossils of the earliest land plants and fungi have been found in rocks formed during the Precambrian period, says Hedges, possibly because their primitive bodies were too soft to turn into fossils."
THE QUESTION IS WHY IS FOOD ON OUR PLANET AT ALL FOR 8.7 MILLION DIFFERENT SPECIES OF LIFE? I GUESS YOU ARE SO DUMB, YOU THINK IT WAS JUST BY OUR SHEER LUCK