Rent is too expensive?
The center of the earth (going over 2000 miles from the centerpoint) involves liquid magma and a solid iron core, neither of which are habitable.
Outside the core we have very high temps and very high pressure, which would make it tough to survive, but certainly possible.
2006-08-19 19:20:37
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answer #1
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answered by iandanielx 3
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"How might want to it possibly seem irrational that organisms upon the earth got here from a residing being." --the major situation with that premise is the position did this residing being come from? people have speculated that existence in the international originated from micro organism that hitched a experience from an asteroid or comet that collided with Earth. yet no matter if authentic, this does not clarify the position existence itself got here from. it truly is surely rational to reject the theory that the progression extends back in time always. huge Bang theory exhibits this won't be able to be authentic. faster or later existence must have originated from non-existence. Given how the atoms are the very similar between both, and the mandatory chemical concepts are an analogous, non-residing count number is the glaring position to commence.
2016-11-05 05:13:35
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answer #2
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answered by ? 4
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It's too dang hot- probably around 5650 Kelvin, which works out to over 5000 degrees Celsius. That's far too hot for living organisms, which usually die around 100 degrees C.
There are also more mundane matters, like the extreme pressure and lack of nutrients, water, etc. Although organisms have been found buried deeply in sediments- even miles deep- they have unusual biochemistry, and may replicate only over very long periods of time- thousands or millions of years.
See also reference 1.
2006-08-19 19:15:43
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answer #3
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answered by Anonymous
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I could repeat what everyone else says, but that wouldn't be interesting enough. There is life thousands of feet below the surface... Maybe not as far down as the earth's core, but still pretty far down. We find it all the time in the oil business. There is a bacteria that eats oil and gives of H2S as a byproduct. Wells drilled in these zones are very dangerous (because H2S is a very poisonous gas).
2006-08-19 19:23:37
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answer #4
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answered by Moose 4
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Short answer: way, way, way too hot, and too much pressure. The very center of the earth is a rotating sphere of semi-molten iron (at least, that's what they believe), with the combined pressure of the atmosphere and about 4000 miles of dirt, rock, and hot magma on top of it. You're talking about temperatures in the neighborhood of 3000C, with pressures of thousands of psi. Nothing resembling life as we know it can survive under those conditions.
2006-08-19 19:16:13
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answer #5
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answered by theyuks 4
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Maybe there is life ... altho it may not be "life as we know it" sort of life, but who can say that DNA/RNA based life forms are that exists?
What concept of a human does an amoeba have?
"Such creatures can't exists. Too big ... and their shkin isn't always in contact with a nutrient-rich water environment"
2006-08-19 20:25:17
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answer #6
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answered by atheistforthebirthofjesus 6
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Could be... because the center of the earth is molten iron.
2006-08-19 19:14:21
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answer #7
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answered by Paul P 5
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Heat and pressure are too high to support any life.
2006-08-20 03:10:33
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answer #8
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answered by Jeffrey B 2
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THE HEAT!
2006-08-19 19:16:32
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answer #9
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answered by Erin H 2
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