Evolution 
              Biodiversity found on Earth  today is the result of 4 billion years of evolution. The origin of life has not  been definitely established by science, however some evidence suggests that  life may already have been well-established a few hundred million years after  the formation of the Earth. Until approximately 600 million years ago, all life  consisted of archaea, bacteria, protozoans and similar single-celled organisms. 
               The history of biodiversity during the Phanerozoic (the  last 540 million years), starts with rapid growth during the Cambrian  explosion—a period during which nearly every phylum of multicellular organisms  first appeared. Over the next 400 million years or so, global diversity showed  little overall trend, but was marked by periodic, massive losses of diversity  classified as mass extinction events. 
                 
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The apparent biodiversity shown in the  fossil record suggests that the last few million years include the period of  greatest biodiversity in the Earth's history. However, not all scientists support  this view, since there is considerable uncertainty as to how strongly the  fossil record is biased by the greater availability and preservation of recent geologic  sections. Some (e.g. Alroy et al. 2001) argue that, corrected for sampling  artifacts, modern biodiversity is not much different from biodiversity 300  million years ago. Estimates of the present global macroscopic species  diversity vary  
              Apparent marine  fossil diversity during the Phanerozoic Eon  
              from 2 million to 100 million species, with a best estimate of  somewhere near 13–14 million, the vast majority of them arthropods. 
               Most biologists  agree however that the period since the emergence of humans is part of a new  mass extinction, the Holocene extinction event, caused primarily by the impact  humans are having on the environment. It has been argued that the present rate  of extinction is sufficient to eliminate most species on the planet Earth  within 100 years. 
             New species are regularly discovered (on average between  5–10,000 new species each year, most of them insects) and many, though  discovered, are not yet classified (estimates are that nearly 90% of all arthropods  are not yet classified). Most of the terrestrial diversity is found in tropical  forests.                |