Mass extinctions haven't happened as far as DNA is concerned, which made it from the "first" life form (creature X) all the way thru single celled organisms to trees to insects to us, and it did this in an unbiased way about it's form/shape (it's interface with Earth), and unimpeded by Earth's major events.
Where does it come from? Is it Earth's will? Aliens? God?
Researchers now say that a symbiotic bacterium called Carsonella ruddii, which lives off sap-feeding insects, has taken the record for smallest genome with just 159,662 'letters' (or base pairs) of DNA and 182 protein-coding genes
That's pretty amazing isn't it. How did it even get that way! What was DNA before (or on smaller scale/less complexity) than that?
If we destroy earth it will probably be nuclear war and maybe that's exactly what happened to Mars named after the god of war.
Mass extinctions haven't happened as far as DNA is concerned, which made it from the "first" life form (creature X) all the way thru single celled organisms to trees to insects to us, and it did this in an unbiased way about it's form/shape (it's interface with Earth), and unimpeded by Earth's major events.
Where does it come from? Is it Earth's will? Aliens? God?
That's pretty amazing isn't it. How did it even get that way! What was DNA before (or on smaller scale/less complexity) than that?