Researchers at the University of Maryland have discovered a way to
identify and track sulfuric compounds in Earth's marine environment,
opening a path to either refute or support a decades-old hypothesis that
our planet can be compared to a singular, self-regulating, living
organism - a.k.a. the Gaia theory.
Proposed by scientists James Lovelock and Lynn Margulis in the 70s, the Gaia theory likens Earth to a self-supporting singular life form,
similar to a cell. The theory claims that, rather than being merely a
stage upon which life exists, life - in all forms - works to actively
construct an Earthly environment in which it can thrive.
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