What are some facts about Earth?
It is populated by silly school children. It has volcanoes that provide them with fires. It has waters for them to swim in. Its rivers flow downhill. It only has one natual moon. People want to go where they cannot. It has had ice ages. “Desserts” form on either side of the equator. The driest “dessert’ on earth is at the south pole. Santa Claus is situated at the North Pole. Ocean widening is occurring. It is magnetic. It is the third rocky planet out from the sun. It is the only space object known on earth to support life. It is a mixture of 92 elements. It contains both liquid, vaporised and frozen water. It has an atmosphere. Atmospheric pressure is 16 pounds per square inch. Atmosphere is 200 miles deep. Deepest ocean is 6 miles deep. Non sun dependent worms live in the bottom of the ocean. All other known life forms on earth deend upon energy from the sun. The earth rotates on its axis every day. The earth orbits the sun at a distance of 92 million miles (radius). The orbit of th
Our Earth is 75% water, our Earth’s atmosphere is 80% nitrogen, the other 20% is mostly oxygen with some traces of Argon and some other elements. Out of the 75% of Earth’s water, 97% of it comes from the oceans. The Dead Sea is almost nine times more saltier than the oceans. Our Earth is really a sphere that gets flattened as it rotates around the galaxy. Our Earth’s time slows down when it rotates into the black hole. Our Earth’s sister planets is both Venus and Mars. Our moon we see at night had been a chunk of rock that was apart of Earth which broke off when a meteor landed on Earth causing this rock to float off of Earth’s surface. When the moon had floated off Earth it was still apart of Earth, it floated by like a hot air balloon and we could see it a lot larger and brighter than we could right now up in the sky through the galaxy. Obsidian is an ignieus rock caused by fresh scalding scorching hot lava flowing into the bottom of the cold ocean floor causing the lava to cool resu
At night time you’re on the side of the Earth that looks away from the sun. In addition to revolving on its axis, giving us night and day, the Earth also orbits the Sun. The Earth goes around the Sun once every 365.25 days, once every year. Six months from now, at night you’ll be looking away from the Sun, in the opposite direction from the direction that you will be looking tonight. This accounts for why we see different constellations at different times of the year. The stars that we see never change (they do, but to such a small degree that it doesn’t count). The stars that you see tonight will be in exactly the same position this time next year. Just as the Sun seems to rise, traverse the sky and set so the evening stars seem to wheel overhead in the course of the night and end up in a different position. But what is in fact happening is that our own planet, the Earth is rotating on its axis and creating this appearance.