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OH BOY HEAT DENUTURES PROTEINS AND RENDERS THEM MULFUCTION , EXTREME HEAT COOKS THEM BEYOND RECOGNITION AND FUNCTION . SPORE FORMATION IS A LONG TERM ADAPTIVE RESPONSE TO STRESS LEVELS AND CANNOT BE USED TO EXPLAIN HOW PROTEINS/CELLS SURVIVED THE EXPECTED IMMENSE HEAT . BOY ITS LIKE BOMBS THAT FELL IN BAGDAD BUILDING EACH PRODUCING A NEW BUILDING THAT ONLY TAKE A SMALL AMOUNT OF FORCE TO MAKE THEM FALL DOWN .DID THE CELLS MUTATE AT THE EXPECTED BIG BANG OR WHAT . BOY LETS QUESTION THINGS . OVER TO YOU PROFESSOR

2006-09-19 12:46:34 · 6 answers · asked by roy 1 in Science & Mathematics Zoology

6 answers

just like cooking rice i guess

2006-09-19 12:50:10 · answer #1 · answered by mike k 3 · 0 0

Well, let's see...umm, proteins were not around during the Big Bang...it was an immense explosion that scattered matter all over the place...elements to be exact. Over time these things cooled and began to cluster and when they did...stars and planets formed. The gravity of stars attracted planets and they began to orbit. In Earth's case...life eventually started after everything cooled and became more stable. When life started, you got yourself some proteins...but there are billions of years between the Big Bang and life starting....does that answer your question?

2006-09-19 13:53:49 · answer #2 · answered by Shaun 4 · 0 0

silly human. the big bang release elements in the vacous void that is the universe and they bonded together to form water acids and so on. the big bang and all it's immense heat had already cooled when the elements release bonded and formed amino acids which eventually formed proteins....and the proteins that make up archea bacteria can withstand up to 95 degrees celcius which is pretty hot. it took millions of years for those bacteria to form though....so the big bang has nothing to do with protein/ cell formation.

2006-09-19 14:34:15 · answer #3 · answered by insertnamehere 2 · 0 0

I'm confused by the question. There were no proteins in existence when the big bang had immense heat.

2006-09-19 12:50:48 · answer #4 · answered by iandanielx 3 · 0 0

Firstly, it is most irritating to try to read a question written in all capitals. As for the meat of your question, the big bang took place nine billion years before the earth formed -- or before there was any such thing as a protein.

2006-09-19 12:51:29 · answer #5 · answered by Anonymous · 1 0

Maybe the proteins were wearing little itsy bitsy teeny weenie fireproof suits, or maybe because it has to do with a time span of a few billion years.

Oh ya, by the way, TURN YOUR CAPS LOCK OFF!!!!

2006-09-19 12:57:52 · answer #6 · answered by Walter D 3 · 0 0

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