Exposed Areas Above Sea Level on Earth >3.5 Gyr Ago: Implications for Prebiotic and Primitive Biotic Chemistry

How life began on Earth is still largely shrouded in mystery. One of the central ideas for various origins of life scenarios is Darwin’s “warm little pond„. In these small bodies of water, simple prebiotic compounds such as amino acids, nucleobases, and so on, were prod...

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Main Authors: Jeffrey L. Bada, Jun Korenaga
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: MDPI AG 2018-11-01
Series:Life
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.mdpi.com/2075-1729/8/4/55
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spelling doaj-acea397d05c04ec38ca0c780ddd3d5f82020-11-24T21:48:35ZengMDPI AGLife2075-17292018-11-01845510.3390/life8040055life8040055Exposed Areas Above Sea Level on Earth >3.5 Gyr Ago: Implications for Prebiotic and Primitive Biotic ChemistryJeffrey L. Bada0Jun Korenaga1Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California, San Diego, CA 92093, USADepartment of Geology and Geophysics, Yale University, New Haven, CT 06520, USAHow life began on Earth is still largely shrouded in mystery. One of the central ideas for various origins of life scenarios is Darwin’s “warm little pond„. In these small bodies of water, simple prebiotic compounds such as amino acids, nucleobases, and so on, were produced from reagents such as hydrogen cyanide and aldehydes/ketones. These simple prebiotic compounds underwent further reactions, producing more complex molecules. The process of chemical evolution would have produced increasingly complex molecules, eventually yielding a molecule with the properties of information storage and replication prone to random mutations, the hallmark of both the origin of life and evolution. However, there is one problematic issue with this scenario: On the Earth >3.5 Gyr ago there would have likely been no exposed continental crust above sea level. The only land areas that protruded out of the oceans would have been associated with hotspot volcanic islands, such as the Hawaiian island chain today. On these long-lived islands, in association with reduced gas-rich eruptions accompanied by intense volcanic lightning, prebiotic reagents would have been produced that accumulated in warm or cool little ponds and lakes on the volcano flanks. During seasonal wet⁻dry cycles, molecules with increasing complexity could have been produced. These islands would have thus been the most likely places for chemical evolution and the processes associated with the origin of life. The islands would eventually be eroded away and their chemical evolution products would have been released into the oceans where Darwinian evolution ultimately produced the biochemistry associated with all life on Earth today.https://www.mdpi.com/2075-1729/8/4/55continental crustexposed landprebiotic chemistryvolcanic islandsvolcanic lightning
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Jeffrey L. Bada
Jun Korenaga
spellingShingle Jeffrey L. Bada
Jun Korenaga
Exposed Areas Above Sea Level on Earth >3.5 Gyr Ago: Implications for Prebiotic and Primitive Biotic Chemistry
Life
continental crust
exposed land
prebiotic chemistry
volcanic islands
volcanic lightning
author_facet Jeffrey L. Bada
Jun Korenaga
author_sort Jeffrey L. Bada
title Exposed Areas Above Sea Level on Earth >3.5 Gyr Ago: Implications for Prebiotic and Primitive Biotic Chemistry
title_short Exposed Areas Above Sea Level on Earth >3.5 Gyr Ago: Implications for Prebiotic and Primitive Biotic Chemistry
title_full Exposed Areas Above Sea Level on Earth >3.5 Gyr Ago: Implications for Prebiotic and Primitive Biotic Chemistry
title_fullStr Exposed Areas Above Sea Level on Earth >3.5 Gyr Ago: Implications for Prebiotic and Primitive Biotic Chemistry
title_full_unstemmed Exposed Areas Above Sea Level on Earth >3.5 Gyr Ago: Implications for Prebiotic and Primitive Biotic Chemistry
title_sort exposed areas above sea level on earth >3.5 gyr ago: implications for prebiotic and primitive biotic chemistry
publisher MDPI AG
series Life
issn 2075-1729
publishDate 2018-11-01
description How life began on Earth is still largely shrouded in mystery. One of the central ideas for various origins of life scenarios is Darwin’s “warm little pond„. In these small bodies of water, simple prebiotic compounds such as amino acids, nucleobases, and so on, were produced from reagents such as hydrogen cyanide and aldehydes/ketones. These simple prebiotic compounds underwent further reactions, producing more complex molecules. The process of chemical evolution would have produced increasingly complex molecules, eventually yielding a molecule with the properties of information storage and replication prone to random mutations, the hallmark of both the origin of life and evolution. However, there is one problematic issue with this scenario: On the Earth >3.5 Gyr ago there would have likely been no exposed continental crust above sea level. The only land areas that protruded out of the oceans would have been associated with hotspot volcanic islands, such as the Hawaiian island chain today. On these long-lived islands, in association with reduced gas-rich eruptions accompanied by intense volcanic lightning, prebiotic reagents would have been produced that accumulated in warm or cool little ponds and lakes on the volcano flanks. During seasonal wet⁻dry cycles, molecules with increasing complexity could have been produced. These islands would have thus been the most likely places for chemical evolution and the processes associated with the origin of life. The islands would eventually be eroded away and their chemical evolution products would have been released into the oceans where Darwinian evolution ultimately produced the biochemistry associated with all life on Earth today.
topic continental crust
exposed land
prebiotic chemistry
volcanic islands
volcanic lightning
url https://www.mdpi.com/2075-1729/8/4/55
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