On Sat, Mar 7, 2020 at 7:54 AM Lawrence Crowell <
[email protected]> wrote:

> The occurrence of life on Earth in such a rapid time does pose a
> possibility for a fairly rapid occurrence, at least on a geological time
> scale. for life.


Life needs water and liquid water has existed on the Earth for 4.4 billion
years.

Evidence from zircons for the existence of oceans on the Earth 4.4 Gyr ago
<http://www.geology.wisc.edu/~valley/zircons/Wilde2001Nature.pdf>

Even though it had liquid water there is no evidence life existed on Earth
until 900 million years had passed, and even then it was just bacteria. It
took another 800 million years before the first eukaryotes evolved, and 2
billion years after that before the first multicellular creatures evolved,
and 700 million years after that before creatures with the ability to make
radio telescopes evolved. That doesn't seem very rapid to me, the sun will
start to turn into a red giant in about 500 million years, so if the
process had been a bit slower we'd be going extinct along with everything
else on the planet when we had achieved about the same level of technology
that we have now.

 John K Clark

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