It's interesting to conjecture the effects on mythology having a ring would have, especially if it wasn't there at some point and formed over course of human history. The sky having a line, heavens possessing a bridge. Early explorers trying to follow it. Generations of children wanting to climb it.Wonder how much of an effect having a ring around the Earth would have upon early humans?
I dont know the details about saturn's rings, but i remember seeing a show on history channel that said saturn had two of them specifically that helped define her rings. Again, dont know the details, and i apologize for that. I think the show was called universe.
I dont know the details about saturn's rings, but i remember seeing a show on history channel that said saturn had two of them specifically that helped define her rings. Again, dont know the details, and i apologize for that. I think the show was called universe.
Those moons are much smaller than Earth's Moon. Earth/Moon is really more of a dual planet. If Saturn had a moon with the same size ratio to our moon there would be no rings.
I don't think that would be possible. Modern humans are a very young species, about 200,000 years. The rings would be much older, let's say like the moon, around 4 billion years.It's interesting to conjecture the effects on mythology having a ring would have, especially if it wasn't there at some point and formed over course of human history.Wonder how much of an effect having a ring around the Earth would have upon early humans?
Very pretty, thanks for sharing
Wonder how much of an effect having a ring around the Earth would have upon early humans?
A lot of comments for the video state it's impossible for it to happen with the Earth (citing the Moon as one reason), is that true? What would need to be different for the Earth to have a ring?
Well, as more space junk accumulates, . . .
Not sure that rings would of had much of a impact on man's early development beyound the mythological but I think mankind of the space age might of found things very different.
Actually the knowledge that the Earth is a sphere is quite ancient. The Greeks knew it at least from 300 BC (Plato and Aristotle knew that, and Eratosthenes did the first know estimation of the figure). By the late antiquity, the knowledge was spread at least to Europe, Middle-East and India. I suppose the Chinese and Meso-Americans, with their emphasis on celestial observations, were not oblivious to this fact, too. The idea that ancient people thought the Earth was flat is actually a modern misconception.Would it not have a major effect on early navigation and perhaps earlier discovery of the fact that the Earth is a sphere?
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