Our Sun is considered a second generation star born from a supernova. Contained in the supernova, are heavy elements such iron. The iron decayed to become rock boulders. The Earth was formed by numerous collisions of boulders, rocks, and dust. Later, it would be comets and asteroids. In Skylab, America's first space station (May 1973-Feb 1974), there was an experiment to see how particles free of gravity would react. Those particles became attracted to one another which proves that in the vacuum of space, objects with mass, will attract one another.
Earth Science Week was created in 1998.
You could say that God created them. But if you don't believe in god, you can't really say that he made them. :P And in Science, it was said that the Earth and the Moon were separated from one celestial body that its contents are the Earth and the Moon itselves!
They both have to do with how things work and how things that surrond came to be or how they work, but Earth Science is different because it describes more of how the world was created and the things on Earth.
Christians say and believe that the creation account in Genesis is true. God created the heavens and the earth.
Most religions provide a story about how the world was created - all these religious stories do no match up with the factual, observable evidence about how the world was created (the subject of Earth Science). Thus the development of Earth Science (indeed science in general) has lead to people falling away from belief in the religious explanations for things and sadly from religion itself.
If you mean "What is the earth made for", then there's no clear answer. It is commonly accpeted in science that the earth was not 'made' for any purpose, but created out of chance.
it is earth science because it is only used on earth making it earth science
earth science
" Earth science is the science about earth, beoch."
i would say its life because its the life of a plant
No. Earth science is about Earth.
i would say that a science textbook would have the answer. :)