study science before you try to mock it.
big bang was an unknown amount of time before the formation of our solar system. Like billions of years before. Our sun used to be bigger, before that it was a cloud of dust.
In fact you're not even talking about evolution of life. We're talking about formation of solar systems with this dust. Here's the deal.
Big swaths of gases condense, collect together in the dead of space by thier own gravity and magnetism. Once it gets to a certain pressure it explodes, this forms a sun and pushes matter out, heavy matter stays in and lighter stuff flies farther out. It's why most uranium and heavy metals are in the sun and we're mostly rock if you go further out the blast zone the planets are gasses.
The matter flings out in an explosion and it solidifys in an orbit around the sun. This is how gas creates a sun and solar system.
1st life was made by organic molecules that form naturally under certain conditions which we can replicate. And i'll be darned if these little physical stacks of dominoes didn't start moving around and absorbing stuff to use.
2007-06-04 11:01:00
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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Sigh....
We didnt come from rocks OR dust.
Big Bang:
"In physical cosmology, the term Big Bang has two related meanings. It is a cosmological model in which the universe has been expanding for around 13.7 billion years (13.7 Ga), starting from a tremendously dense and hot state. The term is also used in a narrower sense to describe the fundamental 'fireball' that erupted at or close to time t=0 in the history of the universe.
Observational evidence for the Big Bang includes the analysis of the spectrum of light from galaxies, which reveal a shift towards longer wavelengths proportional to each galaxy's distance in a relationship described by Hubble's law. Combined with the assumption that observers located anywhere in the universe would make similar observations (the Copernican principle), this suggests that space itself is expanding. Extrapolation of this expansion back in time yields a state in the distant past in which the universe was in a state of immense density and temperature. This hot, dense state is the key premise of the Big Bang.
Theoretical support for the Big Bang comes from mathematical models, called Friedmann models, which show that a Big Bang is consistent with general relativity and with the cosmological principle, which states that the properties of the universe should be independent of position or orientation.
The theory of Big Bang nucleosynthesis predicts the rates at which various light elements are created in models of the early universe and gives results that are generally consistent with observations. The Big Bang model also predicts the cosmic microwave background radiation (CMB), a background of weak microwave radiation filling the whole universe. The discovery of the CMB in 1964 led to general acceptance among physicists that the Big Bang is the best model for the origin and evolution of the universe."
AND how do we come from rocks, you say?
2007-06-04 10:54:56
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answer #2
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answered by DEPRESSED™ 5
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there are various historic ancestors of the two people and apes, and in case you flow a techniques adequate returned they are extremely comparable. in case you examine plenty in this concern you will see that it incredibly is in many cases complicated to make sure no count if an historic hominid fossil is ape or pre-human. yet no, there has been no discovery of a "lacking link". some have been found related to different species, yet they are uncommon.
2016-11-25 22:46:06
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answer #3
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answered by degraffenreid 4
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That's pretty clever. We should also share our DNA with dirt as well since Genesis states that humans came from the dust.
2007-06-04 10:56:56
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answer #4
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answered by Mrs. Pears 5
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Fruitcake is right. Do you know how fast things travel in space? Ever heard of meteorite fragments? They find them all the time. And they aren't talking about 1 special "chosen" rock, so they don't need to find anything!
2007-06-04 10:56:18
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answer #5
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answered by kermit 6
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Why would this rock still be here? I'm also afraid what you've heard about the "Big Bang" is a little skewed.
2007-06-04 10:54:16
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answer #6
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answered by SameTwo 2
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You might want to sit in on some science classes in junior high, or at a really good elementary school.
2007-06-04 10:55:11
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answer #7
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answered by jtrusnik 7
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Huh....I think you need to retake fourth and fifth grade science there Scooter. That isn't what it says at all.
2007-06-04 10:53:54
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answer #8
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answered by Anonymous
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You are still dust!
2007-06-04 10:53:54
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answer #9
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answered by God is love. 6
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You're a fruitcake
2007-06-04 10:53:43
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answer #10
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answered by Andrew B 2
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