Yes, Earth's original atmosphere is believed to have contained methane, ammonia, water vapor, and other gases. This atmosphere was formed from gases released during volcanic activity. Over time, the atmosphere changed due to the presence of early life forms that produced oxygen through photosynthesis.
Neptune's atmosphere is primarily composed of hydrogen, helium, and methane. These gases contribute to Neptune's bluish appearance and extreme weather patterns. Other trace gases present in its atmosphere include water vapor, ammonia, and hydrocarbons.
The original atmosphere contained only nitrogen, carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, methane, and water vapor. Today's atmosphere contains 78% nitrogen, 21% oxygen, 1% shared between argon, carbon dioxide, helium, methane, ammonia, and neon.
i was taught by my amazing science teacher ..lol... that the 2 original gasses were methane and ammonia. hope this is a good enough answer. its as accurate as superman! :) -stachova witness
The early Earth's atmosphere consisted mainly of carbon dioxide, water vapor, nitrogen, and small amounts of methane and ammonia. Over time, as photosynthetic organisms evolved and produced oxygen, the atmosphere gradually transitioned to contain more oxygen and less carbon dioxide.
Oxygen was lacking in the atmosphere of primitive Earth. Instead, the atmosphere was primarily composed of gases such as carbon dioxide, nitrogen, methane, ammonia, and water vapor.
Mainly ammonia, methane, and water vapor.
The original atmosphere of earth contained primarily ammonia and methane, very similar to the atmosphere on Venus and Jupiter today.
Its atmosphere is.
The giant outer planets Jupiter, Saturn, Uranus, and Neptune have extremely thick atmospheres of hydrogen, helium, methane, and ammonia. Titan, the moon of Saturnalso has a methane-ammonia atmosphere.
That's a good basic description of it, yes.
Methane, ammonia, hydrogen and water ice is most of it - more methane than anything else.
The planet Saturn does have an atmosphere, and indeed, it consists mostly of atmosphere. The main chemical constituents of the atmosphere of Saturn are methane, ammonia, and hydrogen.
Uranus' atmosphere is primarily composed of methane and ammonia, which give it its blue-green colour.
Neptune's atmosphere is primarily composed of hydrogen and helium, along with traces of methane. Methane is responsible for giving Neptune its blue color. Other gases present in smaller amounts include water vapor, ammonia, and hydrocarbons.
The two main gases that make up the atmosphere of Uranus are hydrogen and helium. The atmosphere also contains ammonia and methane.
The composition of Saturn's atmosphere is primarily hydrogen and helium. There are trace amounts of oxygen, methane, ammonia and nitrogen.
The atmosphere of Uranus contain hydrogen, helium, methane, etc.