Our Earth formed 4.54 billion years ago, but when did life begin? Surprisingly, the first evidence points to 3.7 billion years ago. These were simple microorganisms that arose in the chaotic conditions of a young planet full of volcanoes and hot waters. Striking evidence comes from 3.5 billion-year-old stromatolites from Western Australia. These layered structures, created by cyanobacteria, photosynthesized, oxygenating the oceans. Similar microfossils have been found in Greenland, dating back 3.7 billion years. About 2.4 billion years ago, the Great Oxygen Crisis occurred. The accumulation of free oxygen transformed the atmosphere and oceans, proving catastrophic for anaerobic life forms but opening the way for more complex, aerobic organisms. Scientists speculate that life may have originated in hydrothermal vents in deep-sea "black smokers." There, in the absence of sunlight, carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, and nitrogen could have combined to form RNA molecules—the self-replicating precursors of DNA. This incredible journey, spanning billions of years, culminated in the "Cambrian Explosion" about 540 million years ago, when biodiversity exploded. The history of life on Earth is an ongoing evolutionary marvel that we continue to explore.