×

Geologists of Jackson Hole's video: Serpentinites and the Origin of Life

@Serpentinites and the Origin of Life
Presented by Ron Frost, University Wyoming                                                               One of the great mysteries in geology is “How did life begin”? Darwin in a letter to a friend Joseph Hooker in 1871 postulated that life could have begun in a warm pond full of ammonia and phosphorous salts where proteins slowly developed. The problem with this is that though the early atmosphere on Earth was reducing, the impact of light waves on Fe2+ in the warm pond would convert it to Fe3+, making the pool too oxidizing for complex organic compounds to survive. What’s more, without the ozone layer, the surface of the early Earth would have been bathed in UV radiation. This means that the most likely locality for the origin of life is in submarine vents. The most reducing environment on Earth is found in the submarine vents emitting fluids that are associated with the formation of serpentinites.  The production of magnetite during serpentinization explains why the fluids from some sea floor vents are so reducing that they contain hydrogen and methane. In this environment, they are protected by kilometers of ocean water from the withering ultraviolet radiation that bathed the surface of the planet where life began.

5

1
Geologists of Jackson Hole
Subscribers
3.3K
Total Post
195
Total Views
48K
Avg. Views
738.9
View Profile
This video was published on 2019-04-24 18:12:54 GMT by @Geologists-of-Jackson-Hole on Youtube. Geologists of Jackson Hole has total 3.3K subscribers on Youtube and has a total of 195 video.This video has received 5 Likes which are lower than the average likes that Geologists of Jackson Hole gets . @Geologists-of-Jackson-Hole receives an average views of 738.9 per video on Youtube.This video has received 1 comments which are lower than the average comments that Geologists of Jackson Hole gets . Overall the views for this video was lower than the average for the profile.

Other post by @Geologists of Jackson Hole