How Long Ago Did Earth Start Supporting Life and How Do We Date Its Formation?

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The Earth formed approximately 4.55 billion years ago, with the Moon forming around the same time. The late heavy bombardment, a period of intense asteroid impacts, lasted until about 3.8 billion years ago. The earliest evidence of life, in the form of bacterial geochemical indicators, dates back to around 3.7 billion years ago. Significant atmospheric changes occurred between 2.5 and 2.0 billion years ago, driven by the proliferation of bacteria that increased oxygen levels. The oldest geochemical indicators of animal life appear around 630 million years ago, with the first macroscopic animal life recorded approximately 580 million years ago. Land plants emerged around 450 million years ago. Understanding these timelines helps clarify when the Earth became capable of supporting life and how scientists date geological events through methods like radiometric dating.
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I guess it'd be hard to tell when the Earth became the earth, so I suppose a better question would be; 'How long ago was the Earth able to support life?' I've read that life has only had approximately 200 million years to get to where it is today because of the period of heavy bombardment which lasted for the first 400-600million years of our spinning rock's existence, but my anthropology professor pointed out that the first recorded fossilized microbial life is 3 billion years old. Naturally I'm puzzled, please help me gain clarity. (also, for curiosity's sake, I'm interested in how we date the earth)
 
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Thanks a ton!
 
BuddyPal said:
I guess it'd be hard to tell when the Earth became the earth, so I suppose a better question would be; 'How long ago was the Earth able to support life?' I've read that life has only had approximately 200 million years to get to where it is today because of the period of heavy bombardment which lasted for the first 400-600million years of our spinning rock's existence, but my anthropology professor pointed out that the first recorded fossilized microbial life is 3 billion years old. Naturally I'm puzzled, please help me gain clarity. (also, for curiosity's sake, I'm interested in how we date the earth)

Hopefully the links above cleared up most of your questions! However, some simplified dates just in case:

4.55 Ga: Formation of the Earth and Moon
3.8 Ga: End date of the 'late heavy bombardment'
3.7 Ga: First evidence of bacterial life (geochemical indicators)
2.5-2.0 Ga: Oxygenation of the Earth's atmosphere via increased bacteria
630 Ma: Oldest geochemical indicators of animal life (early demosponge)
580 Ma: First macroscopic animal life observed in fossil record
~450 Ma: Land plants appear

Abbrevations above: Ga means 'billion years ago', and Ma means 'million years ago'.
 
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