Читать книгу The Handy Dinosaur Answer Book - Patricia Barnes-Svarney - Страница 15
BEGINNINGS OF LIFE When did life first begin on Earth?
ОглавлениеNo one knows the precise time that life began on Earth. One reason is that early life consisted of single-celled organisms. Because the soft parts of an organism are the first to decay and disappear after death, it is almost impossible to find the remains. In addition, because the organisms were so small, they are now difficult to detect in ancient rocks. Some modern viruses are only about 18 nanometers (18 billionths of a meter) across and modern bacteria typically measure 1,000 nanometers across, which is much larger than the early organisms.
In addition, because scientists have found so little fossil evidence, it is difficult to know all the true shapes of the earliest life. Scientists believe that early life was composed of primitive single-cells and started in the oceans. The reason is simple: life needed a filter to protect it from the incoming ultraviolet energy from the Sun—and the ocean waters gave life that protection.
Could life have arrived from outer space?
There is another theory of how the precursors of life were brought to Earth—known as panspermia. Scientists theorize that comets and asteroids bombarded the early Earth, bringing complex organic materials, many of which survived the fall to our planet.
Scientists know there are such organic materials in space. In the late 1960s, radio astronomers discovered organic molecules in dark nebulae. Since that time, other sources have been found, including organic molecules existing in space bodies such as asteroids, comets, and meteorites. In 1969, analysis of a meteorite showed at least 74 amino acids within the chunk of rock. Scientists began to speculate that the organic molecules could have traveled to Earth via meteorites, cometary dust, or, during the early years of Earth, by way of comets and asteroids.
Although many scientists argue that the heat from the impact of a giant asteroid or comet would destroy any organic passengers, many other scientists disagree. They propose that only the outer layers of a large body would be affected, or that the fine, unheated dust of comets could have brought the necessary amino acids to Earth. If this theory is true, we are apparently all—from dinosaurs to humans—made of “star stuff.”
Despite such gaps in knowledge, scientists estimate that the first life began about four billion years ago. These organisms did not survive on oxygen, but carbon dioxide.