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Apr 9 at 3:00 comment added JBH :-) Well... you didn't change your question in the way I suggested. But you did introduce an issue that begs a question: if your planet has magical creatures, why are you worried about whether or not a planet with natural rings can support life?
Apr 8 at 21:36 comment added mza @JBH , thanks for letting me know! I've edited the question now, is there any other information I should add?
Apr 8 at 21:31 history edited mza CC BY-SA 4.0
Added information about my planet to help find a specific answer.
Apr 7 at 10:18 answer added Richard Kirk timeline score: 5
Apr 7 at 8:05 review Close votes
Apr 11 at 1:14
Apr 7 at 6:43 comment added Thaina Isn't our moon used to be a ring sometimes in the past? I think it just about stability and composition that it eventually form a moon instead of stay being a ring. To if the condition was just right we may have earth planet with a ring for a long enough. It might be faint line we can see from the ground
Apr 7 at 6:12 answer added L.Dutch timeline score: 2
Apr 7 at 4:39 comment added JBH Although we don't have any evidence that a ringed planet could harbor life - we also don't have any evidence that it can't (but we do have evidence that a nearly inconsequential ring can exist around an inhabited planet... 😎). Please keep in mind that a good worldbuilding question would be, "I want my inhabited planet to have rings! Given the following specifications of the planet, is there anything prohibiting the rings?" In other words, tell us the rule you want and let us help you rationalize it. Cheers!
Apr 7 at 2:01 answer added PeanutbutterCat timeline score: 1
Apr 7 at 0:55 comment added CommunityBot Please edit the question to limit it to a specific problem with enough detail to identify an adequate answer.
S Apr 6 at 23:24 review First questions
Apr 7 at 0:55
S Apr 6 at 23:24 history asked mza CC BY-SA 4.0