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Interesting facts about Earth (p. 2)
One of the other interesting facts about Earth is that its rotation speed is gradually slowing (Stokes 1982). We know this because some organisms preserved in the fossil record, such as corals and mollusks, lay down a daily layer of material. Many of the same organisms also show an annual variation in growth rate that allows geologists to count the number of daily layers in an annual cycle of growth. This translates directly into the number of days in a year at the time that the organism was alive. Many organisms, such as corals, also show a pattern reflecting lunar cycles.
On the basis of such data, the number of days in a year has been determined for various points of time in the geological past. For example, about 420 million years ago (during the Silurian Period) there were 420 days in a year; 300 million years ago in the Carboniferous (359-299 mya) there were 390 days per year; 80 million years ago (in the Cretaceous (145.5-65.5 mya) there were 370. Today we have 365.2524 days in a year (but our years are still shortening — at the rate of about one day every 16 million years — the world won't stop turning anytime soon.
Another of the interesting facts about Earth is its great age. How old is Earth? Expert opinion estimates about 4.54 billion years (Dalrymple 2001). However, this is not known with certainty since no terrestrial materials have been shown to be that old. The oldest terrestrial minerals that have been reliably dated are zircon crystals from the Jack Hills of Western Australia. They are at least 4.4 billion years old. So it's safe to say that the Earth is at least that old. How much older? No one can say for sure.
It is believed that the Earth was initially far too hot to support life. However, the earliest traces of life are fossil bacterial colonies ("stromatolites"), probably of cyanobacteria, dating to about 3.9 billion years ago. This is some 500 million years later than the earliest known terrestrial minerals. It is unknown whether life first arose on earth or arrived from elsewhere — perhaps in the form of bacteria embedded in an icy meteorite.
During the vast stretches of time that it has existed, the temperature of the Earth has varied widely. Today only 71 percent of the Earth's surface is water. However, during warm periods in the past, such as the Cretaceous Period, oceans covered a much larger percentage of the globe because very little water was tied up in glaciers. There have also been periods of extended cold, which reduced the size of the world's oceans and expanded the glaciers in comparison with today. For example, the Pleistocene Epoch, which only ended about 14,000 years ago, saw repeated ice ages. During most of the Pleistocene, sea levels were far lower than they are today.
Works cited:
Bostrom, N. 2002. Existential Risks: Analyzing Human Extinction Scenarios and Related Hazards. Journal of Evolution and Technology, vol. 9.
Dalrymple, G. B. 2001. The age of the Earth in the twentieth century: A problem (mostly) solved. Special Publications, Geological Society of London, 190: 205-221.
Stokes, W. L. 1982. Essentials of earth history. Englewood Cliffs, New Jersey: Prentice Hall.
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