The atmosphere doesn't only supply the oxygen that our bodies need for respiration, it also protects us from space. High level ozone protects us from the effects of the most harmful ultra-violet rays from the Sun and carbon dioxide ensures that the Earth's temperature stays within the limits needed for life. The atmosphere also protects us from most fragments of space debris by causing them to burn up well before they hit the Earth's surface and it allows water and carbon to be recycled through food chains. How did the atmosphere get here and how has it ended up as being perfect to sustain... Show more The atmosphere doesn't only supply the oxygen that our bodies need for respiration, it also protects us from space. High level ozone protects us from the effects of the most harmful ultra-violet rays from the Sun and carbon dioxide ensures that the Earth's temperature stays within the limits needed for life. The atmosphere also protects us from most fragments of space debris by causing them to burn up well before they hit the Earth's surface and it allows water and carbon to be recycled through food chains. How did the atmosphere get here and how has it ended up as being perfect to sustain life? These are questions that can't be answered with certainty as it all happened long ago in the distant past. It seems that our atmosphere has been pretty much the same mixture of gasses for about 200 million years! Scientists have many theories as to how the atmosphere was formed and how changes have occurred over time. The most widely accepted is the one that suggests it came from volcanic activity. Molten magma contains a lot of gas dissolved in it which is released when it erupts at the surface. The early atmosphere was probably mostly carbon dioxide with little or no oxygen. There were smaller proportions of water vapor, ammonia and methane. As the Earth cooled down, most of the water vapor condensed and formed the oceans. The atmospheres of Venus and Mars are thought to be like the Earth's early atmosphere but the changes which happened on Earth never took place on those planets. Show less
The atmosphere doesn't only supply the oxygen that our bodies need for respiration, it also protects us from space. High level ozone protects us from the effects of the most harmful ultra-violet rays from the Sun and carbon dioxide ensures that the Earth's temperature stays within the limits needed for life. The atmosphere also protects us from most fragments of space debris by causing them to burn up well before they hit the Earth's surface and it allows water and carbon to be recycled through food chains.
How did the atmosphere get here and how has it ended up as being perfect to sustain life? These are questions that can't be answered with certainty as it all happened long ago in the distant past. It seems that our atmosphere has been pretty much the same mixture of gasses for about 200 million years!
Scientists have many theories as to how the atmosphere was formed and how changes have occurred over time. The most widely accepted is the one that suggests it came from volcanic activity. Molten magma contains a lot of gas dissolved in it which is released when it erupts at the surface. The early atmosphere was probably mostly carbon dioxide with little or no oxygen. There were smaller proportions of water vapor, ammonia and methane. As the Earth cooled down, most of the water vapor condensed and formed the oceans. The atmospheres of Venus and Mars are thought to be like the Earth's early atmosphere but the changes which happened on Earth never took place on those planets.
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