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17 answers

We don't know when God first breathed life into Adam, the first living cell. But we do know it had to be less that 4 and a half billion years ago.

2006-10-21 11:09:53 · answer #1 · answered by Rockstar 6 · 0 0

The earliest fossils of single celled organisms appear to be 3.5 billion years old. Compared to that, Homo sapien sapien (not a typo, I refer to modern humanity specificilly) has been around a tiny fraction of time. So, 3.5 billion years or so.

Unless you mean, to go straight from one-celled to homo sapien, in which case, it didn't. There were millions of intermediaries along the way.

2006-10-21 11:10:43 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Clueless since we really don't know what the Lord's time is, we only know what time is on our planet . . . people seem to think the scriptures say on the eighth day Adam & Eve ate the apple as well. They could have existed for millions of years in the garden before giving in to temptation.

All we really know is the creation was divided into periods called days and it probably wasn't a 24 hour one or a 1000 year one.

2006-10-21 11:08:40 · answer #3 · answered by whozethere 5 · 1 0

a million) definite, they reproduce lots speedier yet they are not extra resistant than the multicelluar. 2) in basic terms by way of fact human beings kill cockroaches and that they are not mammals; we don't care approximately them, does not ability that scientists labeled them as "decrease". and that i understand that human beings are like dominating the international, yet to a scientist point of view, we are no longer labeled as "good". shall we, besides the indisputable fact that, say that the bugs stepped forward earlier us and so as that they are invertebrates. 3) Asexual duplicate happens as a cellular-branch, and sexual duplicate isn't. This has no longer something to do with evolution velocity. 4) possibly, besides the indisputable fact that it incredibly relies upon on the place they stay. 5) the place did you get this from? that is not precisely real. Bacterias stay everywhere, yet do no longer stay very long. 6) it is returned devoid of knowledge. verify the place you purchased extremely some those. 7) consistent with all data, EVOLUTION. remark: Please overview the place you purchased extremely some those stuff and verify with different websites earlier asking nonsense questions.

2016-10-15 06:48:10 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

Hey Jim I do not believe in Evolution but I do respect those who do.



On another note: Can we take a look at the neterprise? WHere is Scotty and Uhura and can I have a mind melt with Mr. Spock...

Uh Uhmmm Can I be beamed up?

Thanks!!!

2006-10-21 11:08:14 · answer #5 · answered by . 3 · 0 0

2-3 billion years (the earth is about 4 billion but was probably still too hot the first billion years or so)

2006-10-21 11:09:48 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

12 minutes

2006-10-21 11:17:33 · answer #7 · answered by Zori 3 · 1 0

Evolution doesn't actually make sense-it requires cells to move from chaos to an intricate design, instead of following the laws of science, where things move from order to disorder.

2006-10-21 11:12:29 · answer #8 · answered by RJoy 2 · 1 1

We sure have alot of EXPERTS on this subject,so reckon IM a
expert also.....My best estimation is.....876,453,780 gazillion,
billizillion,quadrillion and 4 years.Or NOT!!
Please say howdy to Spock for me...OK!! Jimbo?

2006-10-21 11:18:00 · answer #9 · answered by OldGeezer 3 · 0 0

About 3.8 - 4 billion years. The earth is 4.6 billion years old.


EDWARD_LMB are you a statistician because your reasoning sounds like bullshit to me.

2006-10-21 11:09:57 · answer #10 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

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