>>I don't know if this theory is born out, but I also think of this when
>>I see Oxygen percentages not even discussed or measured commonly.
>
>Similar to your thoughts on hydrogen. I'd also like to know the answer to this.
>
>I've seen the release of O2 into the Earth's atmosphere described as 
>the greatest catastrophe for life that ever happened, much worse than 
>the fate of the dinosaurs. It wiped out just about everything. Life 
>was mostly anaerobic prior to that, but for a small number of obscure 
>and struggling aerobes - weirdos that lived on explosive gas. 
>Suddenly there was only room for the weirdos, everyone else perished. 
>Now we all breathe this poisonous explosive stuff and think it's 
>normal.

Well, I haven't seen that way of discussing the release of greater O2
percentages into the atmosphere.  It was put forth in the context of
the great mystery as to why there is not more of a historical fossil
record of a wider diversity of life (land life?) up until a few
hundred million years ago.  Trees, for example, I don't think they're
more than a few hundred million years old.  And many creatures, we
have fossil records of them, but they do not really start in abundance
up until a certain point?

In any case, when I heard the presentation, it really seemed to make
sense to me.  The idea was that at various points large quantities of
O2, somehow within the EArth, were released, and with these releases,
finally they resulted in a bit of a change.  I don't know if it was to
the climate or to the suitability of certain breathing biochemistry
approaches or what.



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