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I'm not asking, "was water made of hydrogen & oxygen and was dirt made of rocks & decaying leaves, roots, dead bugs, etc when the dinosaurs were on the Earth?" Of course it was...

What I'm asking is, does the natural biological purification of water return it to its original condition or are there traces of "history" remaining in the water (similar to DNA)?

Is there permanent change to the molecular structure of water?

If there is permanent change, is that beneficial or harmful?

Please explain your reasoning and add sources, if available.

Thank you. ☺

2006-07-27 10:02:20 · 9 answers · asked by Anonymous in Science & Mathematics Biology

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2006-07-27 10:11:01 · update #1

9 answers

Water is "purified" through many processes, for one thing, the "cleanest" water on earth is bound up in Glaciers. However, the earth purifies much of the water as it sinks down, returns through plants and evaporates from the leaves, returning to the clouds and then back down as "pure" rain. Well, as pure as the atmosphere thru which it passed, lol. So, yes, the water is the same water that was here during the dino days, however, it has been purified many, many, many times since them.

Also, science seems to think now that water retains a "memory" of some sort. Tests have shown that pouring the same water over blocks (mazes) of rocks, each test gets shorter, as if the water "remembers" the way and goes thru it faster each time. Unfortunatly, I can't remember the name, try Yahoo! "water, memory test", also the Bible indicates that water has memory and "remembers the dead in it and will give up the dead in it on the Last Day."

2006-07-27 10:51:59 · answer #1 · answered by AdamKadmon 7 · 2 1

>> Would a sample of ocean water, from the time of the dinosaurs, be exactly the same as it is today?

No. It would probably be slightly less salty.

>> does the natural biological purification of water return it to its original condition or are there traces of "history" remaining in the water (similar to DNA)?

Water is water. No traces of history. If you're looking for fossils, dig in the seabed beneath the ocean.

>> Is there permanent change to the molecular structure of water?

Nope. Water is water.

2006-07-27 11:36:05 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

I don't believe the composition of water was the same as it was today. Due to many environmental factors (atmospheric gases composition, mineral contents, etc) the composition of the water (mainly the percentage of salts and other impurities in it) would probably be different. The molecular structure of water, meaning two Hydrogen bonding to an Oxygen never changes, atleast not in salt water. i believe you can form water with Deuterium, which is just a Hydrogen atome with 2 protons instead of one. However, this is rarely is at all found in nature, atleast not in appreciable quantities. As for using water to "trace" history, i can see many problems. Water is a good oxidating agents, it destroys a lot of materials. Thus that is why it's easier to use rocks and fossils. However, ice cores are good examples to traces climate changes throughout history.

2006-07-27 10:09:05 · answer #3 · answered by trafficer21 4 · 0 0

I wonder if you're alluding to the notion of "primordial globular clustering," which I'm uncertain as to the validity of this idea... some health people say there is a difference in the molecular makeup of certain waters that come from various primordial mineral springs... they allude to the idea of the water's ready absorption rate into healthy cells and say that cell's lives are extended indefinitely due to the "qualities inherent" within these waters and the fact that cells have an easier time disposing of waste so they don't become "fouled" over time.

Supposedly, athletes the world over swear by the water's ability to rejuvenate the body... I haven't heard much else on this but if valid, it ostensibly equates with a veritible "fountain of youth!"

2006-07-27 10:27:05 · answer #4 · answered by cherodman4u 4 · 0 0

First of all it is impossible to change the molecule and still have H2O. Ocean water does not go though natural purification. what it does do is dillute. A sample of ocean water today is extremely more saturated with pollutants than when the dinos were here.
on a smaller you could take a look at the dead sea. with no outlet it keeps getting saltier every day. For more info you might find something more on drdino.com

2006-07-27 10:13:46 · answer #5 · answered by rudy 1 · 0 0

There is no change to the molecular structure because then it wouldn't even be water. However, there was a lot of differing things in the water and air then than there are now. The chemical composition would be much different with such things as a higher sulphur content. Scientists can actually use these changes to date some things such as the deep core samples they take in the arctic.

2006-07-27 10:07:48 · answer #6 · answered by sam21462 5 · 0 0

we've scientific information explaining alot of the worldwide's preliminary layout and evolution. we've not got any information of God. i think that the belief of "God" is a cop out. "Oh particular, he created each and every little thing. fairly of attempting to nicely known the way something works, we are going to basically say God works in mysterious techniques". of course, it extremely is basically my opinion. you will in all probability say i'm dumb and don't recognize what i'm speaking approximately, because is a distinctive opinion than what you have. Neither persons is conscious if the different is solid. we are going to discover out as quickly as we die. once you're desirable suited, then you get to taunt me for eternity while i'm in hell. If i'm precise, then you would be fertilizer. pondering I actual have the finished scientific community on my edge, i will take those odds…

2016-12-14 15:03:10 · answer #7 · answered by raina 4 · 0 0

nothing is ever exactly the same from one time to another!

2006-07-27 10:06:26 · answer #8 · answered by Pobept 6 · 0 0

no, I don't think it would due to man's pollution of the environment

2006-07-27 10:08:48 · answer #9 · answered by Comfortably Numb™ 7 · 0 0

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