Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Yaşam" in Turkish language version.
There is growing scientific confidence that the discovery of extraterrestrial life in some form is nearly inevitable
We do not know how many species there are on the earth. Estimates range from 8 million to 100 million. The best guess is that there are 10–14 million species. So far, biologists have identified almost 2 million species.
Life as we know it has been described as a (thermodynamically) open system (Prigogine et al. 1972), which makes use of gradients in its surroundings to create imperfect copies of itself.
In spite of 250 years of taxonomic classification and over 1.2 million species already catalogued in a central database, our results suggest that some 86% of existing species on Earth and 91% of species in the ocean still await description.
There is growing scientific confidence that the discovery of extraterrestrial life in some form is nearly inevitable
Life as we know it has been described as a (thermodynamically) open system (Prigogine et al. 1972), which makes use of gradients in its surroundings to create imperfect copies of itself.
There is growing scientific confidence that the discovery of extraterrestrial life in some form is nearly inevitable
Life as we know it has been described as a (thermodynamically) open system (Prigogine et al. 1972), which makes use of gradients in its surroundings to create imperfect copies of itself.
Scientists now believe there could be as many habitable planets in the cosmos as there are stars, and that makes life's existence elsewhere "inevitable" over billions of years, says one.
In spite of 250 years of taxonomic classification and over 1.2 million species already catalogued in a central database, our results suggest that some 86% of existing species on Earth and 91% of species in the ocean still await description.
There is growing scientific confidence that the discovery of extraterrestrial life in some form is nearly inevitable
Life as we know it has been described as a (thermodynamically) open system (Prigogine et al. 1972), which makes use of gradients in its surroundings to create imperfect copies of itself.
We do not know how many species there are on the earth. Estimates range from 8 million to 100 million. The best guess is that there are 10–14 million species. So far, biologists have identified almost 2 million species.
Until now, however, they were all thought to share the same biochemistry, based on the Big Six, to build proteins, fats and DNA.
Scientists now believe there could be as many habitable planets in the cosmos as there are stars, and that makes life's existence elsewhere "inevitable" over billions of years, says one.
There is growing scientific confidence that the discovery of extraterrestrial life in some form is nearly inevitable
Until now, however, they were all thought to share the same biochemistry, based on the Big Six, to build proteins, fats and DNA.