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Biology Notes: Life on Earth

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Biology Notes: Life on Earth
LIFE ON EARTH REVISION

Analysis of the oldest sedimentary rocks provides evidence for the origin of life.

- Identify the relationship between the conditions on early Earth and the origin of organic molecules.

- Formation of the organic molecule was the first event in the evolution of life. - The molecules provided a building block for cell formation and the food for the earliest life. - Present day life’s atmosphere contains: - Oxygen - Water - Carbon dioxide - Protection from harmful rays from space such as ultraviolet light. - Early earth had an atmosphere containing little free: - Nitrogen - Oxygen - Carbon dioxide - Instead it had - Methane - Ammonia - Water vapour - hydrogen - Those conditions mean that concentrations of organic molecules could have built up on early earth. - First major stage in evolution was formation of organic molecules - Molecules could have formed here in the condition of early earth or they could have come from sources beyond the earth (the cosmos)

- Discuss the implications of the existence of organic molecules in the cosmos for the origin of life on earth.

- Meteorites and comets have been studied to try to add evidence to ideas about the first organic molecules may have risen. - 74 amino acids found in meteorites - The existence of organic molecules means that the same processes could have occurred on primitive earth. - For example an asteroid or anywhere simple compound like methane, ammonia, hydrogen and water and a reducing atmosphere exist. - General agreement that only under very specific conditions could the original molecules exist and therefore the possibility that they could be formed in to complex molecules and eventually primitive cells.

- Describe two scientific theories of the chemicals of life and discuss their significance in understanding the origin of life.

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