Don't worry life will go on. Mother nature will create it after we all kills us off.
Its Elemental Watson. The Earth's Climate has constantly changed over its existence.
There have been many kill offs. Nothing new to report. Honey Bee's, Eagles, Fish.
All the same.
Maybe the shifting of the Continents along with Volcanic events are sort of the reasons.
More than 99 percent of all species that ever lived (over
five billion) [1] are estimated to be extinct. [2][3] Estimates on the number of Earth's current species range from 10 million to 14 million, [4] with about 1.2 million or 14% documented, the rest not yet described.
Life: Evolution and Extinction | Science for the Public
Maybe we are fortunate to believe we are the dominate species? Maybe not.
One only hast to add up all the Coal, Oil, NG equal all the deaths. Maybe we have released half of that Carbon back to recycle.
How much carbon is in the huyman body - Bing
=18%? Sure all the low lands of earth will be under water, new lowlands and better fishing. Sure Holland etc. will be wetlands.
More wars will fix all that!
So Science is proving to itself anyway that when you are dead your cells continue to another demension of life. So I guess mortification sux. Better to bob-brun the candle out is a thought.
MSN
So your essence never really dies unless you get mortification and lay there for a long - long time in a sealed coffin.
But what seals da deal: Microbes !
But now, a study sheds light on what’s driving record methane emissions. The culprits, scientists believe, are microbes — the tiny organisms that
live in cows’ stomachs,
agricultural fields and
wetlands. And that could mean a dangerous feedback loop
— in which these emissions cause warming that releases even more greenhouse gases — is already underway.
“The changes that we saw in the last couple of years — and even since 2007 — are microbial,” said Sylvia Michel, lead author of the
paper published last month in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. “Wetlands, if they are getting warmer and wetter, maybe they’re producing more methane than they used to.”