IceBergSLiM
Lifer
- Jul 11, 2000
- 29,932
- 3
- 81
Originally posted by: Jhill
What about the 2nd coming of Jesus?
Originally posted by: Jeff7
Never gonna:
1) Give you up
2) Let you down
3) Run around
4) Desert you
5) Make you cry
6) Say goodbye
7) Tell a lie
8) Hurt you
I just wanna:
9) Tell you how I'm feeling
10) Have a full commitment, I'm thinking
Now you know the rules, and so do I.
You wouldn't get this from any other God.
I think that by the time that happens, we'll have either colonized some other star system, or else we'd have multiple city-ships roaming the galaxy.Originally posted by: oldsmoboat
When the sun goes, the human race goes.
The Space Pope warned us about this.Originally posted by: cirrrocco
less phucking...I think..i guess once we get sex robots or maybe virtual g/f , b/f, who we can do anytime, I think humans will just stop procreating..what do you think??? kthxbai
Destined for the year 2443. Not much of a big deal. Some videotapes were destroyed, that's about it.Originally posted by: Jhill
What about the 2nd coming of Jesus?
Nah, that'd only kill the people on the half of the planet facing the blast.Originally posted by: tenshodo13
Gamma Ray burst
Originally posted by: videogames101
Virus/disease, most definitely....
Dinosaurs weren't wiped out. Their ancestors now enjoy crapping on our cars.Originally posted by: GagHalfrunt
History has demonstrated that a cataclysm from space can and will easily wipe out the dominant species on earth. The dinosaurs were in charge for 150 million years, one rock from space and poof, bye-bye. We'll probably go the same way. It seems likely that the earth will suffer several more major asteroid/comet strikes before the sun explodes.
Originally posted by: Jeff7
Dinosaurs weren't wiped out. Their ancestors now enjoy crapping on our cars.Originally posted by: GagHalfrunt
History has demonstrated that a cataclysm from space can and will easily wipe out the dominant species on earth. The dinosaurs were in charge for 150 million years, one rock from space and poof, bye-bye. We'll probably go the same way. It seems likely that the earth will suffer several more major asteroid/comet strikes before the sun explodes.
I think humans would survive an impact. Not many, and it'd be a lousy life, but we'd survive somehow. It depends of course on the size of the impactor. If it's some huge body, enough to encase the planet in a firestorm, well then, that's a good format-and-reinstall. If it's something to temporarily retard plant growth and limit sunlight in a way that'd be fatal to reptilian life, we'd probably find a way to survive. We could eat rats and cockroaches. They always seem to survive.
Originally posted by: tenshodo13
Gamma Ray burst
Originally posted by: Vic
Gag is just proving yet again that he knows jack about science. The K-T extinction event is evolution. That's one way that it works. Without that meteor/comet, lowly mammals probably never would have evolved into humans.
In the same vein, one could ask, how are humans going to evolve physically into the next species without some kind of catastrophic event?
I'll now wait for Gag to pull out his usual I believe in some fairy tale BS...
Originally posted by: Jeff7
Never gonna:
1) Give you up
2) Let you down
3) Run around
4) Desert you
5) Make you cry
6) Say goodbye
7) Tell a lie
8) Hurt you
I just wanna:
9) Tell you how I'm feeling
10) Have a full commitment, I'm thinking
Now you know the rules, and so do I.
You wouldn't get this from any other God.
Originally posted by: Xavier434
I don't believe it will require a catastrophic event. However, enough really slow changes to our environment and lifestyles over a lot of time could do it.
Another theory would be to toss in the idea of a human civilization living on another planet. Living on a new planet would most likely result in an instant change to ones environment and lifestyle. Over the course of many generations and years (I am talking thousands to millions here) it is most certainly possible that it would result in at least some form of physical evolution such as bone/muscle structure without the need for a catastrophe.
Originally posted by: Vic
Originally posted by: Jeff7
Dinosaurs weren't wiped out. Their ancestors now enjoy crapping on our cars.Originally posted by: GagHalfrunt
History has demonstrated that a cataclysm from space can and will easily wipe out the dominant species on earth. The dinosaurs were in charge for 150 million years, one rock from space and poof, bye-bye. We'll probably go the same way. It seems likely that the earth will suffer several more major asteroid/comet strikes before the sun explodes.
I think humans would survive an impact. Not many, and it'd be a lousy life, but we'd survive somehow. It depends of course on the size of the impactor. If it's some huge body, enough to encase the planet in a firestorm, well then, that's a good format-and-reinstall. If it's something to temporarily retard plant growth and limit sunlight in a way that'd be fatal to reptilian life, we'd probably find a way to survive. We could eat rats and cockroaches. They always seem to survive.
Gag is just proving yet again that he knows jack about science. The K-T extinction event is evolution. That's one way that it works. Without that meteor/comet, lowly mammals probably never would have evolved into humans.
In the same vein, one could ask, how are humans going to evolve physically into the next species without some kind of catastrophic event?
I'll now wait for Gag to pull out his usual I believe in some fairy tale BS...
Originally posted by: GagHalfrunt
Originally posted by: Vic
Originally posted by: Jeff7
Dinosaurs weren't wiped out. Their ancestors now enjoy crapping on our cars.Originally posted by: GagHalfrunt
History has demonstrated that a cataclysm from space can and will easily wipe out the dominant species on earth. The dinosaurs were in charge for 150 million years, one rock from space and poof, bye-bye. We'll probably go the same way. It seems likely that the earth will suffer several more major asteroid/comet strikes before the sun explodes.
I think humans would survive an impact. Not many, and it'd be a lousy life, but we'd survive somehow. It depends of course on the size of the impactor. If it's some huge body, enough to encase the planet in a firestorm, well then, that's a good format-and-reinstall. If it's something to temporarily retard plant growth and limit sunlight in a way that'd be fatal to reptilian life, we'd probably find a way to survive. We could eat rats and cockroaches. They always seem to survive.
Gag is just proving yet again that he knows jack about science. The K-T extinction event is evolution. That's one way that it works. Without that meteor/comet, lowly mammals probably never would have evolved into humans.
In the same vein, one could ask, how are humans going to evolve physically into the next species without some kind of catastrophic event?
I'll now wait for Gag to pull out his usual I believe in some fairy tale BS...
Awww Vic, still holding a grudge about me kicking your ass every time you try to sell that 6,000 year old earth BS and exposing your complete lack of knowledge about your big book of fairy tales? You really should let it go man. If you're going to base your life on lies you shouldn't get that upset when other people notice.
Vic, you're once again proving that your reading comprehension skills are sorely lacking. Should I toss in a lot of Lo! and Behold! and a long series of x begat x to help you along? Where did I discount evolution when mentioning the end of the dinosaurs? The death of the dinosaurs and the rise of mammals were opposite sides of the same coin. The climate changed to a degree that creatures larger than a chicken couldn't survive. So what we think of as dinosaurs disappeared and smaller creatures had the chance to evolve in an environment without a massive number of top level predators preventing it.
How will humans evolve following the next space-based cataclysm? Who is to say that they will evolve at all? Or at least who is to say they'll evolve into anything we recognize as humans? The next evolution of humans might change us into something completely different like the birds springing from dinosaurs. If life on earth is again reduced to smaller mammals and insects there's no guarantee that humans will again spring up as the dominant species. Perhaps the nuclear winter will be longer, or shorter or the dust that settles will be of a different composition and things won't happen the same way. Maybe insects will evolve as the dominant life form and the small mammals that eventually turned into humans the last time around won't even have a chance.
If you think you know exactly what will happen following an event that causes mass species extinctions and indescribable climate changes you're dealing in fairy tales as usual.
