Earths Formation – Sunday 23rd July 2023


Earths Formation – Sunday 23rd July 2023

Its a most interesting subject. Although there’s many theories and ideas, they all are worthwhile. And there is also something we should all find a small humour in, we have found ourselves on a spinning ball, being kept warm and lit by a star and we have to figure us out and then figure out how we got here and then how the planet came to be and so on.
When i puzzle something out I always look for anything that doesn’t fit.
I determined how a star formed and it makes sense that planets would use a similar method but I’m not convinced that the planets in this solar system are tumbleweeds. There is something quite unique in this space. Time will tell though.
We have theorised that the moon, which we need to remember is absolutely essential for Earth, is a chunk that was knocked out of Earth. My first question is, what planet did all the other moons get chipped from and it doesnt fit, (to my mind).
We look at different layers of the planets magma and determine it was dry etc. An initially molten planet would also be dry.
Thats not to say that there hasn’t been any tumbeweed activity, certainly there could be outer coating of particles on an initially molten planet.
But no matter, we’re here and we’ll figure it out.
That we can see all this order going on beyond our planet, I cannot see all that and then conclude that this is an accident, random, a tumbleweed that has produced all this intelligence and beauty on its surface here. Life didn’t do all this by itself, something made it possible for life to exist and thrive in such an inhospitable environment. The chance of a tumbleweed planet doing all this and accidentaly having a moon, it doesnt fit. My work with genetics doesnt fit in that theory either.
My work doesnt fit in a universe currently believed to be 13.8 billion years old.
We can be flexible about these things but we musn’t be stubborn and hold on to an estimate as fact, if proof comes along to show us that the estimate needs revising because it hampers work being built on and around it.
Fiona MacLeod (C)