If humans arrive to live on the new earth, will they really be able to survive on it?

Updated on science 2024-07-23
5 answers
  1. Anonymous users2024-02-13

    Yes. Because the environment of the new earth should be very similar to the earth, and human beings are very adaptable and can modify the environment, so they can survive on it.

  2. Anonymous users2024-02-12

    It depends on what the scientists are doing. If scientists can live there, then humans can live.

  3. Anonymous users2024-02-11

    Not necessarily, because there may be some civilization or a deadly virus in the local area.

  4. Anonymous users2024-02-10

    Super-Earth resources far exceed those of Earth, so what difference would it make if humans could live on it?

  5. Anonymous users2024-02-09

    Plutozoic Cryptozoic Era 4570 Earth Emergence Proterozoic Era 4150 First living --- bacteria appeared on Earth Dionysian Era 3950 Archaea Emergence Early Rain Sea Era 3850 Oceans and other waters appeared on Earth Archean Archean Archean 3800 Paleoarchan 3600 Blue-green algae occurrence Middle Archean 3200 Neo-Archean 2800 First Ice Age Proterozoic Iron Formation 2500 Strandic Invasion 2300 Orogenic 2050 Paleoproterozoic Consolidation 1800 Caprock 1600 Extension 1400 Mesoproterozoic Narrow Belt 1200 Stretching 1000 Rodinia Paleocontinental Formation Glacogenic 850 Snowball Occurrence Neoproterozoic Ediacaran 630 +5 -30 Multicellular Occurrence Phanerozoic Paleozoic Cambrian Cambrian Explosion of Life Ordovician Fish Occurrence; Marine algae flourish Silurian Occurrence of terrestrial naked ferns Devonian Fish boom Amphibian emergence Insects Emergence of seed plants Occurrence of stone pine and horsetail Carboniferous Insect flourishing Emergence of reptiles Coal forest Gymnosperms Emergence of reptiles Mesozoic Permian Permian extinction event, extinction of 95% of life on Earth Pangea formation Triassic Dinosaur occurrence Oviparous mammal emergence Jurassic Marsupial mammal emergence Bird emergence Gymnosperm boom Angiosperm emergence Cretaceous Flourishing and extinction of dinosaurs Cretaceous-Tertiary extinction event, 45% of life on Earth extinct Mammals with placenta appeared Cenozoic to the present Unit: million years.

    Remember.

Related questions
10 answers2024-07-23

It's resource destruction. Human beings excessively consume various mineral resources. According to traditional consumption calculations, the world's oil is only enough to last for 50 years, and coal and natural gas are only enough to be exploited for 200-300 years. >>>More

6 answers2024-07-23

?This involves not only the strategy of sustainable development, the resources provided by the earth for the survival and development of human beings, but also the number of years in which the earth's external environment can be maintained. >>>More

10 answers2024-07-23

It is well known that biological fossils can be preserved for hundreds of millions of years or even forever. On the other hand, there are many products of human civilization that are more robust and durable than fossils. For example, ceramics, glass, various inert metals, various natural stone and gemstone products, as well as various underground large-volume concrete buildings, will not be damaged in a very short environment. >>>More

23 answers2024-07-23

If human beings never grow old, it will be a bad thing for the earth, there will be more and more human beings, exponential growth, more wars will break out, human beings will also squeeze the earth's resources, and they will not be happy.

30 answers2024-07-23

What would happen to the earth if humans suddenly disappeared? >>>More