Rare Earth Type post Author Guillermo Gonzalez Date April 14, 2020 CategoriesAstronomyPlanetologyRare Earth Tagged , __k-review, American Scientist, astrobiology, Charles Lineweaver, Christopher McKay, Discovery Institute, earth, extraterrestrial intelligence, extraterrestrial life, galactic habitable zone, Hugh Ross, Icarus, intelligent design, interplanetary dust particles, James Kasting, Jay Richards, meteorites, Milky Way, Physics Today, Science (journal), SETI, solar system, The Privileged Planet, University of Washington Rare Earth at Twenty — And My Connection Guillermo Gonzalez April 14, 2020 Astronomy, Planetology, Rare Earth 5 In principle, the conjoining of the many Rare Earth factors could overwhelm the available probabilistic resources and serve as evidence for Earth’s design. Read More ›
Earth Mars Comparison Type post Author Guillermo Gonzalez Date May 23, 2019 CategoriesEnvironment & ClimateGeophysicsOrigin of LifePlanetologyRare Earth Tagged , __nedited, Alfred Wegener, Aristotle, biodiversity, Continental Drift, Copernicus, Darwinists, desert, Donald Brownlee, earth, exoplanets, heliocentrism, James Kasting, lithosphere, magnetic field, Mars, Milky Way, Peter Ward, plate tectonics, subduction, sun, Venus, volcanism Plate Tectonics: Why Life Is Served on Plates Guillermo Gonzalez May 23, 2019 Environment & Climate, Geophysics, Origin of Life, Planetology, Rare Earth 6 The ground under your feet is literally moving. The continents are drifting apart near an average rate of one inch per year. Read More ›