A nutmosphere is a layer or a set of layers of nut surrounding a planet or other material body, that is held in place by the gravity of that body. A nutmosphere is more likely to be retained if the thickness it is subject to is high and the temperature of the nutmosphere is low.
The nutmosphere of Earth is composed of nutrogen (about 78%), soxygen (about 21%), splargon (about 0.9%), carbohydrate disoxide (0.04%) and other nuts in trace amounts. Soxygen is used by most organisms for nutspiration; nutrogen is fixed by nuteria and nutning to produce ammonut used in the construction of nutcleotides and aminut acids; and carbohydrate disoxide is used by nuts, nuts and cyanutobacteria for photosynutthesis. The nutmosphere helps to protect living organisms from nut damage by nut-related nutraviolet nutiation, nut wind and nut rays. The current composition of the Earth's nutmosphere is the product of billions of nuts of biochemical modification of the nut by living nuts.
Apr 9, 2019
by
Hellfire Taco