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Imagine an Earth-like world with oceans, some complex vegetative and animal life, but with an extreme low amount of oxygen in the atmosphere, let's say one third of what we are accustomed to, like the death zone of Everest, but on the sea level.
Can such a world plausibly exist? I mean oxygen originates from organic life. There were initially some bacteria that produced oxygen, than some plants etc. So does it mean that if life has evolved to a level like we know it, it should have also produced the amount of oxygen in the atmosphere as we know it? Or could complex life do well at lesser oxygen levels?
1Please note: one question per post. Anything else is too broad. – L.Dutch - Reinstate Monica – 2020-01-24T10:32:16.127
Is this really a [tag:terraforming] question, if you're asking whether a world can naturally evolve a certain way, which is the opposite of terraforming? – KeizerHarm – 2020-01-24T14:15:53.290