How does living organisms survive the ride in space from this so called Big Bang?
Because the big bang took place billions of years ago, it took a long time for the space dust to concentrate into forms that eventually became the planets we have identified as a part of our solar system, which is the milky way, There are millions of a combination of asteroids, and comets flying around now, but I believe its possible for the atoms that created the molecules which were inert life forms. The land mass configuration that now exists as islands and continents was much different in the beginning of the evolution and the change is still occurring. But I believe that at the time the potential for life forms to develop here most of the planet was covered with water. Our planet experienced many hits from asteroids, and comets. Comets are composed of ice, which is frozen water, and pieces of space debris. If a moderate amount of these space missiles slammed into our planet, most of them landing in the water, the ice would melt, releasing the rudimentary molecular configurations,
*sighs* The Big Bang did not create the organisms straight away…. They came along once everything settled down… The emergence of oxygenic photosynthesis (around 3 billion years ago) and the subsequent emergence of an oxygen-rich, non-reducing atmosphere can be traced through the formation of banded iron deposits, and later red beds of iron oxides. This was a necessary prerequisite for the development of aerobic cellular respiration, believed to have emerged around 2 billion years ago. In the last billion years, simple multicellular plants and animals began to appear in the oceans. Soon after the emergence of the first animals, the Cambrian explosion (a period of unrivaled and remarkable, but brief, organismal diversity documented in the fossils found at the Burgess Shale) saw the creation of all the major body plans, or phyla, of modern animals. This event is now believed to have been triggered by the development of the Hox genes. About 500 million years ago, plants and fungi colon