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Previously on "How to Grow a Planet"

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  • TimberWolf
    replied
    Originally posted by zeitghost
    Er, 13.7e9 at the last estimate.

    Though the solar system is relatively young at a mere 4.someodd billion.

    Just think of all the blue giants that had to die to make the metals.

    Otherwise there'd be nowt but H, He, and a bit of Li.
    Yeah, our Sun is "at least" 2nd generation.

    Leave a comment:


  • TimberWolf
    replied
    We evolved with grasses.

    So many things had to happen for humans to develop, I do wonder how likely Type 1 civilisations are. Life itself seems simple to make, single cells, but to get all the way to animals who can interact with the environment such as ourselves seems horridly unlikely, although there may be many paths other than ours. And we took 15 billion years to get here.

    Leave a comment:


  • TimberWolf
    replied
    Originally posted by wim121 View Post
    Ooooo what channel/time/day?

    Cant wait to see mars terraformed. Hopefully it will happen in my lifetime.
    Mars is a bit of an annoyance, because to my simple minded solar system model, Mars should have been a bigger and warmer planet sporting liquid water. Instead we have a small cold planet and a huge asteroid belt.

    Leave a comment:


  • TimberWolf
    replied
    Originally posted by wim121 View Post
    Ooooo what channel/time/day?

    Cant wait to see mars terraformed. Hopefully it will happen in my lifetime.
    BBC iPlayer - TV - Factual - Science & Nature

    Flowering plants are a comparative recent development and now they rule the world.

    Leave a comment:


  • wim121
    replied
    Originally posted by TimberWolf View Post
    Interesting series. This week was about flowers and how they developed flowers into seeds and fruits and produced primates to propagate their seed. Fascinating. Didn't know ferns produced little wriggly sperm either. Next week is about grass, which evolved with modern humans. Co-evolved some might say.

    Amazing how much water plants transpire in a day too. Wasteful beggers.
    Ooooo what channel/time/day?

    Cant wait to see mars terraformed. Hopefully it will happen in my lifetime.

    Leave a comment:


  • BlasterBates
    replied
    The best way is to put billions and billions of tons of dust together in space then over time, the dust will create a star and a planetry solar system.

    Leave a comment:


  • SimonMac
    replied
    When a mummy planet and a daddy planet love each other very much......

    Leave a comment:


  • TimberWolf
    started a topic How to Grow a Planet

    How to Grow a Planet

    Interesting series. This week was about flowers and how they developed flowers into seeds and fruits and produced primates to propagate their seed. Fascinating. Didn't know ferns produced little wriggly sperm either. Next week is about grass, which evolved with modern humans. Co-evolved some might say.

    Amazing how much water plants transpire in a day too. Wasteful beggers.

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