01 JAN 2012 by ideonexus
Big History as a Fable
Once upon a time, about ten or fifteen billion years ago, the universe was
without form. There were no galaxies. There were no stars. There were no
planets. And there was no life. Darkness was upon the face of the deep. The
universe was hydrogen and helium. The explosion of the Big Bang had passed, and
the fires of that titanic event – either the creation of the universe or the ashes of a
previous incarnation of the universe – were rumbling feebly down the corridors of
space.
But the gas...Folksonomies: wonder big history
Folksonomies: wonder big history
Carl Sagan tells the story of our Universe's history as a fairy tale.
21 SEP 2011 by ideonexus
Seeing How Species Arise is Similar to Understanding Star...
The way we discovered how species arise resembles the way
astronomers discovered how stars “evolve” over time. Both processes
occur too slowly for us to see them happening over our lifetime. But we
can still understand how they work by finding snapshots of the process
at different evolutionary stages and putting these snapshots together
into a conceptual movie. For stars, astronomers saw dispersed clouds
of matter (“star nurseries”) in galaxies. Elsewhere they saw those clouds condens...Just as astronomers search the skies for stars in varying stages of life, biologists look for species in varying degrees development.