Migration causes evolution, which is why you see animals very similar, but of a different species. For example, the camel was originally a North American animal. During the last ice age, part of the species migrated over to Asia, remaining the same, considering that both North America and Asia are in the Northern Hemisphere. However, another part of the species migrated to South America, a different hemisphere and climate, and became the llama.
Well, if that's the case, do you see birds running the show? Across billions of years, their brains haven't gotten sophisticated enough to produce highly intelligent beings. Thank you for proving my point.
Collect a group of animals; birds, dogs, cats, various fish, deer; whatever you like, and create a controlled environment. And then throw a couple of humans in there and see what happens.
I agree with you there. Life can exist without the exact same circumstances as on earth, such as plants developing to turn CO2 into oxygen. But plants aren't intelligent, are they?
In direct proportion from the earth to the sun? If our sun was any bigger, we'd be dead. There's also radiation that the sun emits. A bigger sun would emit more radiation, which means that the planet's magnetic field would need to be larger, which means that it's core needs to be larger and spinning faster, which would make the planet a magnet for any iron-based meteors, and one would eventually crash into the planet, and everything would die. No life there. Take the planet Mercury, for example. It has the most dense iron core in our solar system. Do you realize how many times that planet gets struck by meteors? If it was in the position that the earth is in, it would be getting hit even more, due to weaker gravity further away from the sun.
Yes, it does. The moon serves as a device that holds the magnetic field in place. The further away it moves, the less of a magnetic field we have. In a few billion years, when the moon is out of reach, there will be nothing left on earth. You should take some of those lectures about the moon. Very interesting.
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