"The earth abideth..." - how long?

by Nathan Natas 8 Replies latest watchtower beliefs

  • Nathan Natas
    Nathan Natas

    http://boston.com/dailynews/013/ascribe/_End_of_World_Has_Already_Begu%3A.shtml

    End of World Has Already Begun, University of Washington Scientists Say in Book 'The Life and Death of Planet Earth'

    By Ascribe, 1/13/2003 11:57

    SEATTLE, Jan. 13 (AScribe Newswire) -- In its 4.5 billion years, Earth has evolved from its hot, violent birth to the celebrated watery blue planet that stands out in pictures from space. But in a new book, two noted University of Washington astrobiologists say the planet already has begun the long process of devolving into a burned-out cinder, eventually to be swallowed by the sun.

    By their reckoning, Earth's ''day in the sun'' has reached 4:30 a.m., corresponding to its 4.5 billion-year age. By 5 a.m., the 1 billion-year reign of animals and plants will come to an end. At 8 a.m. the oceans will vaporize. At noon - after 12 billion years - the ever-expanding sun, transformed into a red giant, will engulf the planet, melting away any evidence it ever existed and sending molecules and atoms that once were Earth floating off into space.

    ''The disappearance of our planet is still 7.5 billion years away, but people really should consider the fate of our world and have a realistic understanding of where we are going,'' said UW astrophysicist Donald Brownlee. ''We live in a fabulous place at a fabulous time. It's a healthy thing for people to realize what a treasure this is in space and time, and fully appreciate and protect their environment as much as possible.''

    In ''The Life and Death of Planet Earth,'' Brownlee and UW paleontologist Peter Ward use current scientific understanding of planets and stars, as well as the parameters of life, to provide a glimpse of the second half of life on Earth and what comes after.

    The book, a sort of biography of our planet, is being published today by Times Books, a division of Henry Holt and Co. It is a sequel to Ward and Brownlee's best-selling and much-discussed book ''Rare Earth,'' in which they put forth the hypothesis that simple life is relatively common in the universe but complex, Earth-like life is exceedingly rare.

    ''The Life and Death of Planet Earth'' explains how the myriad life on Earth today was preceded by a long period of microbial dominance, and the authors contend that complex life eventually will disappear and be succeeded again by a period of only microbial life. They say that higher life will be removed much as it came into being, ecosystem by ecosystem. Aspects of the planet's past, such as numbingly cold ice ages, will be relived in the period of devolution.

    ''If we do begin to slide into the next glacial cycle, there probably are grand, planetary-scale engineering projects that might stop or lessen the effects,'' Ward said.

    ''The big unknowns are whether we can afford to do such projects and would we really know what to do. If the planet was cooling, we could, in principle, begin painting the surface black to collect more heat. Could we afford it? And what would be the many possible ramifications of a planet suddenly covered in black paint? Any planetary remediation project would always run the risk of making things worse.''

    Eventually, though, scorching heat will drive land creatures to the sea for respite. Those that can adapt will survive for a time, but eventually the oceans will warm too much for the complex life forms to continue.

    ''The last life may look much like the first life - a single-celled bacterium, survivor and descendant of all that came before,'' the authors write. Finally, even the surviving microbes ''will be seared out of existence.''

    The prospects of humans surviving by moving to some other habitable planet or moon aren't good, Brownlee and Ward contend, because even if such a place were found, getting there would be a huge obstacle. Various probes sent into space could survive Earth's demise, and just a few grams of material could arguably carry a DNA sample from every human, they say, but it's not likely the human species itself will survive. Long before the planet's final end, life will become quite challenging, and finally impossible, for humans.

    As the sun gets hotter and grows in size, it will envelop Mercury and Venus. It is possible it will stop just short of Earth, the authors say, but the conditions still would make this a most-inhospitable planet. More likely, though, the sun will consume Earth as well, severing all the chemical bonds between molecules and sending its individual atoms out into space, perhaps eventually to form new planets. That would leave Mars as the nearest planet to the sun, and on Mars the fading sun's glow would be like that of Earth's moon.

    That end is still some 7.5 billion years distant, but by then Earth will have faced a variety of ''ends'' along the way, the authors say. The last dinosaur perished long ago. Still to come are the last elephant, the last tree, the last flower, the last glacier, the last snowflake, the last ocean, the last life.

    ''The Life and Death of Planet Earth'' is like its predecessor, ''Rare Earth,'' in that the authors collected and distilled some of the latest scientific ideas about the Earth's place in the universe, Brownlee said. He hopes the new book, like ''Rare Earth,'' will spark widespread discussion, and give people a fundamental and realistic view of the past and future of their planet.

    ''It's a healthy thing to think of the place of Earth among the other planets, and its place in the sun. The sun gave life and ultimately it will bring death.''

    A high-resolution version of the Earth's Clock of Life image can be downloaded at

    www.washington.edu/newsroom/news/images/earthclock.jpg

    Edited by - Nathan Natas on 14 January 2003 9:20:37

  • Kenneson
    Kenneson

    "Heaven and earth shall pass away, but my words will not pass away."--Mark 13:31; see also 2 Peter 3:10-11.

    The earth abides only to a time indefinite. Eccl. 1:4

  • Nathan Natas
    Nathan Natas

    Ecclesiastes 1:4 - "One generation passeth away, and another generation cometh: but the earth abideth for ever. " (KJV)

    "Generations come and generations go, but the earth remains forever. " (New International Version)

    "A generation goes and a generation comes, But the earth remains forever. " (New American Standard Bible)

    "One generation goes and another generation comes, but the earth remains forever." (Amplified Bible)

    "Generations come and go, but nothing really changes." (New Living Translation)

    "A generation goes, and a generation comes, but the earth remains forever. (English Standard Version)

    "People come, and people go, but still the world never changes." (Contemporary English Version)

    "One generation passes away, and another generation comes; But the earth abides forever." (New King James Version)

    "One generation passeth away, and another generation cometh; but the earth abideth for ever. (21st Century King James Version)

    "One generation goeth, and another generation cometh; but the earth abideth for ever." (American Standard Version)

    "A generation is going, and a generation is coming, and the earth to the age is standing." (Young's Literal Translation)

    "[One] generation passeth away, and [another] generation cometh, but the earth standeth for ever." (Darby Translation)

    "Generations come and generations go, but the earth remains for ever." (New International Version - UK)

  • LDH
    LDH

    Interesting reading, NN.

    Did you get my email?

    Lisa

  • Nathan Natas
    Nathan Natas

    Yes, Lisa, I did. Thank you!

    I appreciate your view on things.

  • Earnest
    Earnest

    In a recent article on "The aftermath of the Great Collision between our Galaxy and the Large Magellanic Cloud", astrophysicists at Durham University predict that the Large Magellanic Cloud will likely merge with the Milky Way in 2.4 billion years' time. This could alter the orbit of the planets and end life on earth two billion years sooner than expected.

    Will the earth continue forever or only to times indefinite?

  • Nathan Natas
    Nathan Natas

    Ooops! The world has already ended!

  • waton
    waton

    It is great to be alive now, and take in the great Universe show. Being part of the residue on the surface of this fragile planet, that is the Cosmos's way of knowing itself, as far as we know.

    To redeem the magic of bible based beliefs, hopes, 2 things have to happen:

    1) Re.11:18 has to be fulfilled, killing off polluters and warmongers, and

    2) replenish the Suns' Hydrogen fuel, or replace that furnace, exchange it with another star, when the LMC or Andromeda comes drifting through our neighbourhood. if not,

    bible hopers have been hoodwinked.

  • smiddy3
    smiddy3

    These bible writers are no more guided by Holy Spirit /Jehovah God / Jesus Christ / than the Governing Body of Jehovah`s Witnesses today are .

    So don`t waste your time debating what this scripture meant or what this Bible writer was trying to convey etc,etc,

    God whoever he is supposed to be couldn`t even preserve his own word as original texts because no such original texts exist nowadays of either the Hebrew Scriptures (OT) or the Christian Greek Scriptures (NT)

    So why believe anything at all that the Bible says because it can`t be verified by any God as being the Truth.

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