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Hydrothermal Vents Primordial Soup & The Miller-Urey Experiment Life? From Space What Can We Learn from Our Neighbors: Life Elsewhere in the Solar System The Ocean Floor: Site of Hydrothermal Vents Deep-sea hydrothermal vents form along mid-ocean ridges, the volcanic undersea mountain ranges where new seafloor is created. MOR http://maritime.haifa.ac.il/departm/lessons/ocean/lect07.html Ocean Vents Around the World Vents may be 3.5 - 4 billion years old, but were discovered by scientists less than 25 years ago (1977). Deep-Sea Submersible Alvin http://www.divediscover.whoi.edu/images/vent_sites.gif http://oceanexplorer.noaa.gov/technology/subs/alvin/alvin.html A hydrothermal vent is a hotspring/geyser on the seafloor. It continuously spews super-hot (~400ºC), mineral-rich water that helps support a diverse community of organisms. black smoker white smoker Lush communities of strange and unique organisms survive 6-ft long tube worms Microbes, some symbiotic, combine vent chemicals with oxygen and use the resultant energy to make food and to grow. Large animals populate the sulfide mounds and the surrounding bare lava, living on the energy harnessed by the microbes. ft long clams Organisms that do not depend on photosynthesis or sunlight for energy! http://www.ocean.udel.edu/deepsea/level-2/geology/vent.jpg Tube worm close-up More Vent Organisms Dense bacteria in vent waters White crabs cluster near vents Thousands of shrimp ~ 2430 m water depth on the Central Indian Ridge http://library.thinkquest.org/18828/media/snowblower.jpg Instead of photosynthesis, vent ecosystems derive their energy from chemicals in a process called "chemosynthesis." Both methods involve an energy source (1), carbon dioxide (2), and water to produce sugars (3). Photosynthesis gives off oxygen gas as a byproduct, while chemosynthesis produces sulfur (4). Image courtesy Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2001/ast13apr_1.htm Supporters of this theory claim that the organic molecules at the thermal vents are not formed in 300ºC temperatures, but rather in a gradient formed between the hydrothermal vent water, and the extremely cold water, 4ºC (39.2ºF), which surrounds the vent at the bottom of the ocean. The temperatures at this gradient would be suitable for organic chemistry to occur. Debates still remain, however, as to the gradient's effectiveness in producing organic compounds. http://www.chem.duke.edu/~jds/cruise_chem/Exobiology/sites.html Other Chemosynthetic Life in Methane-Sulfur Waters •In cold, deep sea areas off Florida and Oregon coasts •Similar communities of organisms get energy from methanesulfur-enriched waters •Source is oil seeps not hydrothermal vents •Both show that the Sun is not the ultimate energy source for living systems. Tube worms and crab, Gulf of Mexico Tube worms and clams, Gulf of Mexico http://www.gomr.mms.gov/homepg/regulate/environ/chemo/chemo.html Could life have started in these hot deep sea environments? •Laboratory experiments simulating hydrothermal vent conditions produced amino acids •Later experiments: amino acids formed short protein-like chains called peptides •If only these peptides can replicate themselves and form long chains = proteins, the basic substance of life! •Some say they have generated self-replicating peptides or RNA strands in the lab. But they fail to provide a natural source for their compounds or an explanation for what fuels them. But even if we find answers in lab experiments, will it be the same as the Earth of 4 BILLION years ago? Maybe not. But the search continues… The Primordial Soup Hypothesis Oparin (Russian) and Haldane (British): independently proposed similar hypothesis in the 1920s reducing atmosphere (low oxygen) = + abundant methane (CH4) and ammonia (NH3) ideal “primordial soup” for the origin of life 1953: Stanley Miller, a grad student & his Nobel Prize-winning adviser, Harold Urey set up this simple apparatus: CH4 water vapor ( ( ) electrode NH3 H2 H2O Ingredients: Methane (CH4), ammonia (NH3) and hydrogen (H2) gas = primitive atmosphere (note no oxygen) Water boiled in a flask = primitive ocean Electrodes attached to power supply to create a spark = lightning Results of the Miller-Urey Experiment: •After 1 week, the water in the flask turned into a muddy brown liquid (the primordial soup) containing amino acids, cyanide (HCN) and formaldehyde (H2CO) •Later experiments even produced 12 of the 20 most common amino acids needed for life! •Abiotic synthesis of amino acids only needs a source of chemicals and a reducing environment Did Miller and Urey create life from non-life? • No. They were able to form amino acids which are necessary ingredients for all life. • Next step to life: transform amino acids to proteins sugars + nucleotide bases (adenine, guanine, phosphate) RNA or DNA (living cell) • Numerous experiments and hypotheses on the next step to life • Still, others believe this path is not the way to go. There must be some other way life began on our planet. Maybe the seeds of life on Earth came from outer space… Scientists have long believed meteorites and comets played a role in the origin of life. Raining down on Earth during the heavy bombardment period some 3.8 billion to 4.5 billion years ago, they brought with them the materials that may have been critical for life, such as oxygen, sulfur, hydrogen and nitrogen. http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2001/ast20dec_1.htm Astronomers have detected many kinds of organic molecules in space, floating in clouds of gas or bound up in dust particles. They range from the simplest - water, ammonia, methane, hydrogen cyanide and alcohols, including ethyl alcohol - to more complex molecules. Interestingly, of the more than 70 amino acids found in meteorites, only eight of them overlap with the group of 20 which occur commonly as structural components of proteins found in humans and all other life on Earth. More Evidence: December 20, 2001: A NASA scientist has discovered sugar and several related organic compounds in two meteorites -- providing the first evidence that another fundamental building block of life on Earth might have come from outer space. Pass the sugar? The carbonaceous Murchison meteorite, pictured here, harbors sugar-related organic compounds. Image copyright 2001 by New England Meteoritical Services http://science.nasa.gov/headlines/y2001/ast20dec_1.htm The prospects for life in the Universe just got sweeter, with the first discovery of a simple sugar molecule in space. The discovery of the sugar molecule glycolaldehyde in a giant cloud of gas and dust near the center of our own Milky Way Galaxy was made by scientists using the National Science Foundation's 12 Meter Telescope, a radio telescope on Kitt Peak, Arizona. http://www.aoc.nrao.edu/pr/sugar.html In a related project conducted by members of NASA's Astrobiology Institute, scientists have created primitive organic cell-like structures. They did it in their laboratory by duplicating the harsh conditions of cold interstellar space! Did comets carry such protocells to Earth? http://science.msfc.nasa.gov/headlines/y2001/ast05apr_1.htm ALH84001: The Martian Meteorite In 1996, a meteorite was found in Allan Hills, Antarctica. Upon examination, it was discovered that this meteor, which is 4.5 billion years old, fell to the earth 13,000 years ago, and possibly contained evidence of life on Mars. Inside the meteor, along tiny cracks, scientists found evidence of what many believe to be ancient bacteria. This is hotly debated. http://www.chem.duke.edu/~jds/cruise_chem/Exobiology/search.html