Survey
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
History of Life on Earth Chapter 19 Section 1: How Did Life Begin? Section 1 History of Life on Earth Section 1 Key Ideas • What did the Miller-Urey experiment show about the formation of the basic molecules of life? • What are two theories that propose where the building blocks of life originated in early Earth? • How could molecules have become packaged into cells that contain heritable cellular instructions? History of Life on Earth Section 1 The Basic Chemicals of Life • Oparin and Haldane – Suggested early oceans contained organic molecules – 1920’s • Molecules formed spontaneously – Energy from sun, volcanoes, lightning • Hypothesized early atmosphere contained H2, H2O, NH3, and CH4. • The hypothesis was tested in the 1950s by American scientists Harold Urey and Stanley Miller. History of Life on Earth Section 1 The Basic Chemicals of Life, continued The Miller-Urey Experiment • In this experiment, Miller placed hydrogencontaining gases into a device. • He used electrical sparks to simulate lightning. • Miller found organic molecules in his device, including some of life’s basic building blocks: amino acids, fatty acids, and other hydrocarbons History of Life on Earth Miller-Urey Experiment Section 1 History of Life on Earth Section 1 The Basic Chemicals of Life, continued • The Miller-Urey experiment – organic molecules could form from inorganic molecules. • Some molecules used in Miller’s experiment could not have existed in abundance on early Earth. • Early Earth did not have a protective ozone layer. History of Life on Earth Section 1 The Basic Chemicals of Life, continued • UV radiation from the sun would have destroyed any methane and ammonia in the atmosphere. • Lack of CH4 and NH3 – Key organic compounds were not made • However, the experiment shows that complex biological compounds can form from simple building blocks. History of Life on Earth Section 1 Life’s Building Blocks • One hypothesis – early biological molecules formed close to hydrothermal vents. – protected from harmful solar radiation. • Another hypothesis – arrived on Earth in meteorites or comets. – Some meteorites contain amino acids. – could have arrived on early Earth, when frequent meteorite impacts were common. History of Life on Earth Section 1 The First Cells • lipids tend to combine in water. • Certain lipids can form a tiny droplet – resembles a cell membrane. • short chains of amino acids can form tiny spherical structures called microspheres. History of Life on Earth Section 1 The First Cells, continued • Microspheres – may have been the first step toward cellular organization. – could not be considered cells unless they had the characteristic of heredity. • In the laboratory, scientists have not been able to make proteins or DNA form spontaneously in water. • They have been able to form short chains of RNA, the nucleic acid that helps to carry out the instructions of DNA. • RNA molecules may have been the first self-replicating molecule. History of Life on Earth Section 1 The First Cells, continued • Cech and Altman found a type of RNA molecule, called a ribozyme, that can act like an enzyme. • They also showed that RNA can form spontaneously in water, without DNA. History of Life on Earth Section 1 The First Cells, continued • Cech and Altman further hypothesized that RNA could have changed—evolved—from one generation to the next. • Scientists hypothesize that DNA and proteins eventually took over these roles in the cell. History of Life on Earth Section 1 Summary • The Miller-Urey experiment showed that, under certain circumstances, organic compounds could form from inorganic molecules. • Among the scientific theories that address the origin of life, one suggests that life began close to hydrothermal vents, and another proposes that organic molecules arrived on early Earth from a meteorite. • The formation of microspheres might have been the first step toward cellular organization.