Scientists in a journey to the Atlantic Ocean ridge lifted four fifths of a mile of rocks from beneath a rare attribute possibly linked to life’s beginning.
Researchers have argued already that regions deep inside our vast world may have sheltered sites where life itself started millions of years ago.
In the Atlantic, they gave a name that seemed fit for this jagged rock landscape and creepy spires: Lost City, and this “Lost City” could be the very thing that started the chemistry to open the doors to life.
And now more researchers and specialists have finally seen this possible long-ago Garden of Eden.
A report in the journal Science on Thursday shows that a group of 30 people are digging deep into the seabed and found a huge amount of rocky material: one thousand two hundred-sixty-eight meters which is close to a mile of this rocky substance!
Now researchers, scientists and entire institutions may have the chance to analyze these rocks that could be one of the stepping stones to finding out how life first began. And any of these people finding out how life started could possibly change lives.
This also means finding more about our planet Earth and helping us understand more things about the planet that we call home. We never know what lies ahead and this just might be a glimpse of that, waiting patiently for us to discover it and see the world in a more defined way.
Researchers have argued already that regions deep inside our vast world may have sheltered sites where life itself started millions of years ago.
In the Atlantic, they gave a name that seemed fit for this jagged rock landscape and creepy spires: Lost City, and this “Lost City” could be the very thing that started the chemistry to open the doors to life.
And now more researchers and specialists have finally seen this possible long-ago Garden of Eden.
A report in the journal Science on Thursday shows that a group of 30 people are digging deep into the seabed and found a huge amount of rocky material: one thousand two hundred-sixty-eight meters which is close to a mile of this rocky substance!
Now researchers, scientists and entire institutions may have the chance to analyze these rocks that could be one of the stepping stones to finding out how life first began. And any of these people finding out how life started could possibly change lives.
This also means finding more about our planet Earth and helping us understand more things about the planet that we call home. We never know what lies ahead and this just might be a glimpse of that, waiting patiently for us to discover it and see the world in a more defined way.