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image Is life on earth a one-time event? Share It Thread Tools Search this Thread image
Old May23-09, 09:49 PM                  #1
Ivan Seeking

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Is life on earth a one-time event?

What level of confidence can be assigned to the statement that all life on earth has one point of origin - a foundation species? Also, is there any evidence that there may have been other genetic lines, other foundation species and their descendents, that did not survive.

I am not asserting or implying anything, I am only asking.
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Old May24-09, 12:37 PM                  #2
atyy

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Re: Is life on earth a one-time event?

All elementary discussions I have seen assume a single origin, and show evidence consistent with it. However, the details of the origin of life are still unknown, so we can't say that there was not more than one origin.

http://www.americanscientist.org/iss...origin-of-life
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Old May26-09, 08:33 AM                  #3
Moridin

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Re: Is life on earth a one-time event?

It is, at its core, a probability argument. I suppose that it is possible to view the origin of life as chemical selection operating on different versions yet in the end, only one succeeded. It is worth noting that as far as we know, all life shares common polymers, Nucleic acids and protein catalysts. There are over 390 naturally occurring amino acids known, yet all living organisms consist of the same subset of 22 amino acids. There also seem to be some early indications that amino acids in this subset could be thermodynamically favored in prebiotic synthesis.

http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/comd...damental_unity
http://pandasthumb.org/archives/2009...ino-acids.html
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Old Jun23-09, 10:18 PM                  #4
byohannan

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Re: Is life on earth a one-time event?

read upon this experiment
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Miller-..._of_experiment.

I am sure that something similar is brewing up somewhere else in the universe.
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Old Jun23-09, 11:23 PM                  #5
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Re: Is life on earth a one-time event?

Originally Posted by Moridin View Post
It is, at its core, a probability argument.
Not necessarily. There is current active research looking for non-DNA-based microbial life here on Earth, assumedly left over from Earth's formative years. The idea that we've never seen evidence of it is that it would have slipped right through the cracks of all our current tests - whether that means not detected or merely not differentiated.
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