Science Questions

The Naked Scientists: Science Radio & Science Podcasts

Science Scrapbook
 
Science Questions RSS Feed

If everything on the planet got wiped out by a bomb, could life start again like it did originally? Pat in Lowestoft

I think you'd have to try really hard to wipe out life. There's life thriving in the most inhospitable places on our planet including right down in the deep ocean trenches, in hot vents and volcanoes. I think it would be pretty impossible to wipe out life. Over the last few years people have found bacteria living kilometres down in solid rock, so you'd have to vaporise a couple of kilometres of rock. The best example must be the huge meteorite several kilometres across slammed into the Earth about 60 million years ago. It dispensed with the dinosaurs but not crocodiles, which were around at the same time as the dinosaurs. It meant the certain animals were set back a long way but meant that animals like us, mammals, began to flourish. It gave us our big break in life. So perhaps if we did decimate the Earth with a bomb, then maybe another funny form of life would take over.

May 2006




Naked Scientists Science Radio Show Home Who are The Naked Scientists Information about Naked Scientists
Naked Scientists Podcast Ask the Naked Scientists Podcast Question of the Week Podcast
Naked Science Articles Experiments to do at Home Science Discussion Forum
Science News Stories Answers to Science Questions Interviews with Famous Scientists

Information presented on this website is the opinion of the individual contributors and does not reflect the general views of the administrators, editors, moderators, sponsors, Cambridge University or the public at large.

Click here for the Naked Scientists PODCAST

The contents of this site are © The Naked Scientists® 2000-2012. The Naked Scientists® and Naked Science® are registered trademarks.