No. Not much known during the Big Bang, but the big bang was 4.5 billion years ago, and it is today. Earth was formed once the big bang cooled down, and the big bang formed petrol in the ground because everything has been molten and formed petrol and got buried by the radiation when the bang cooled down and formed Earth.
1 billion
2 billion years in days 2,190 days of fighting about 5000 days
shall not perish from the earth.
As a geologist, I would first identify the key geological events, such as the formation of the Earth, the appearance of life, major extinction events, and significant geological formations. I would arrange them chronologically by their approximate dates, starting with the formation of the Earth around 4.5 billion years ago, followed by the emergence of single-celled organisms around 3.5 billion years ago, the Cambrian Explosion around 541 million years ago, and the mass extinction events, concluding with the rise of humans in the last few million years. This order reflects the progression of geological and biological evolution through time.
It was formed after the second world war? == Probably some time after the earth formed. It's changed shape so much after the last few billion years it's hard to say.
half a billion years left. But that does not mean that PEOPLE will last that long. ;-)
It depends upon how man himself has changed or evolved with the last three centuries or how the earth itself has changed and evolved over the last 600,000,000 years.
The planet itself will at least last for another 2-3 billion years, if your thinking about life on earth then I'd say about at least 10,000 years.
13 billion years, roughly. Our sun was created about 6.5 billion years ago so it is just starting middle-age.
Earth is 4.6+ billion years old but it's really only seen eukaryotes for about the last 2 billion.
No, Earth will not last forever. Eventually, the sun will run out of fuel and expand, engulfing the planet in about five billion years. Additionally, natural disasters, climate change, and human impact could also affect the longevity of Earth as a habitable planet.
In its 4.6 billion yearscircling the sun, the Earth has harbored an increasing diversity of life forms:for the last 3.6 billion years, simple cells(prokaryotes);for the last 3.4 billion years, cyanobacteriaperformingphotosynthesis;for the last 2 billion years, complex cells(eukaryotes);for the last 1.2 billion years, eukaryotes which sexually reproducefor the last 1 billion years, multicellular life;for the last 600 million years, simple animals;for the last 550 million years, bilaterians, water life forms with a front and a back;for the last 500 million years, fish and proto-amphibians;for the last 475 million years, land plants;for the last 400 million years, insects and seeds;for the last 360 million years, amphibians;for the last 300 million years, reptiles;for the last 200 million years, mammals;for the last 150 million years, birds;for the last 130 million years, flowers;for the last 60 million years, the primates,for the last 20 million years, the family Hominidae(great apes);for the last 2.5 million years, the genus Homo (human predecessors);for the last 200,000 years, anatomically modern humans.Periodic extinctions have temporarily reduced diversity, eliminating:2.4 billion years ago, many obligate anaerobes, in the oxygen catastrophe;252 million years ago, the trilobites, in the Permian-Triassic extinction event;66 million years ago, the pterosaurs and nonavian dinosaurs, in the Cretaceous-Paleogene extinction event.all dates are approximate
Roughly 6 billion more years. Then the sun will expand and eat the earth.
Some will last around 4.5 billion years - until the sun becomes a red giant and effectively swallows the Earth.
The Sun has been living for approximately 4.57 billion years , and is expected to last for roughly 5 billion more, as it's lifespan is about 10 billion years. :D
It's generally accepted that the Earth, along with the rest of our Solar system, is 4.55 billion years (give or take 1%). It is estimated that the Earth will last for approximately another 4 billion years, after which the Sun will have grown to become a Red Dwarf and have subsumed all of the inner planets.
The Sun has been living for approximately 4.57 billion years , and is expected to last for roughly 5 billion more, as it's lifespan is about 10 billion years. :D