Noadswood Science, 2011. Life On Earth To describe how life on Earth began Monday, June 06, 2016.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Topic D.1 Evolution Origin of Life on Earth.
Advertisements

CHAPTER 25 CAMPBELL and REECE. Conditions on early Earth made the Origin of Life possible Macroevolution : evolutionary change above the species level.
Origins of Life on Earth
IB Biology Option D Evolution.
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
Origin and Evolution of Life in the Oceans
Chapter 12, Section 3 And parts of 12.4
Noadswood Science, Life On Earth To describe how life on Earth began Saturday, August 08, 2015.
17-2 Earth’s Early History
Early Earth and Origin of Life Chapter 26. Earth’s original organisms are microscopic and unicellular. Life on Earth originated b/w billion years.
Early Earth Notes. The earth was formed 4.6 billion years ago! So what was it like?
Earth's Early History.
Copyright © 2002 Pearson Education, Inc., publishing as Benjamin Cummings Origin of Life In 1862, Louis Pasteur conducted experiments that rejected the.
End Show Slide 1 of 36 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall 17-2 Earth's Early History.
Aim: How did life on earth begin? How is life able to exist today????? I. Heterotroph Hypothesis A. Autotroph - An organism capable of synthesizing its.
WHERE DID THE FIRST LIVING THINGS COME FROM?
Major Events in Evolution ♦4.6 bya – formation of the Earth (Precambrian) ♦3.5 bya – prokaryotic cells ♦2.2 bya – eukaryotic cells ♦600 mya – soft-bodied.
Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall
Primordial Earth Theories on the Origin of Life. Early Earth and Evolution A THEORY of the origins of the universe Big Bang When? -Approx Billion.
14-2: EARTH’S HISTORY.
Modeling Chemical Evolution
End Show Slide 1 of 36 Copyright Pearson Prentice Hall Origin of Life.
Macroevolution The Beginning… / Scientists have tried to figure out the initial conditions and events that may have resulted in the origin of life, however,
28.1 Life in the Universe Are we alone?. Cosmic Evolution History of the universe History of the universe Particulate Particulate Galactic Galactic Stellar.
The Origin Of The Earth SC.912.L Billion years the earth was formed ~3.2 Billion years ago the introduction of Blue-green cyanobacteria ▫Oxygen.
The Origin of Life Early and Modern Ideas.
Earth’s Early History Essential Questions:
CH 26: Early Earth and the Origin of Life Presentation by Alisa Gordon, Erica Guo, and Victoria Chen.
Origin of Life on Earth. Formation of Earth Our knowledge of earth’s history Hypotheses about Earth’s early history are based on a relatively small amount.
Origins of Life on Earth
History of Life Chapter 14.
The History of Life An Introduction to Biological Diversity.
Chapter 12 Section 1 How Did Life Begin? Grade 10 Biology Spring 2011.
How cells formed Because of the lack of ozone, UV light could have provided the energy to combine monomers (the basic chemical building blocks) into polymers.
THE ORIGIN OF LIFE HOW DID IT ALL BEGIN?. FORMATION OF THE EARTH 4.55 billion years ago Earth formed by accretion of matter. Constant bombardment heated.
Chapter 26 Early Earth and the Origin of Life. Phylogeny Traces life backward to common ancestors. How did life get started?
Early Earth & Life. How was the Earth formed? ???? Evidence we have: 1) Earth is 4 – 5 billion years old (using radioactive dating and core sampling)
Evolution: Origins of Life. We know that there is a great variety of living organisms in our biosphere. All living organism also interact with one another.
The Origin and History of Life. What is a theory? An explanation widely accepted and supported by evidence Remember- –Theories are just as important or.
Early Earth Conditions. Origin of Life Beliefs 1. Spontaneous Generation- idea that nonliving material can produce life ex. People believed decaying meat.
Origins of Life – Chapter 21. “Other” theories –comets may have delivered organic compounds probably will never prove how life began have narrowed down.
Intro to the History of Life Age of the Earth = 4.6 billion years Oldest fossils = 3.5 billion years –Prokaryotic type structures similar to spherical.
The History of Life Chapter 14. Early Earth Was inhospitable! Very hot due to: Meteoric impact Volcanic eruptions Radioactive decay Early atmosphere contained:
“…sparked by just the right combination of physical events & chemical processes…” Origin of Life.
THE HISTORY OF LIFE ON EARTH PART 1 UNIVERSE TO EUKARYOTES.
 The solar system is estimated to be 6.6 billion years old.  Earth is estimated to be 4.1 billion years old.
Chapter 17.2: Earth’s Early History.
Early Earth Conditions
The Origin of Life Option D1 D1.1-D1.4 Chapter 26 Campbell.
Early Earth & Life. Age of the Earth Earth is 4 – 5 billion years old (using radioactive dating and core sampling) Formation of the planet Collisions.
Conditions on early Earth made the origin of life possible ○ Possible composition of Earth’s early atmosphere – H 2 O vapor –N2–N2 – CO 2, CH 4, NH 3,
Discovering the origins of life on Earth. Organic molecules Before life could begin the organic molecules necessary for life first had to ‘evolve’. These.
Chapter 26 The Origin of Life.
Miller-Urey Experiment Chemistry → Biology. What do you think is the link between chemistry and biology? Chemistry: Study of chemicals Biology Study of.
Concept 25.1: Conditions on early Earth made the origin of life possible Chemical and physical processes on early Earth may have produced very simple cells.
-Origins-. Vocab review Inorganic Organic Abioitc Catalyst.
Section 1: How Did Life Begin?
The Basic Chemicals of Life
hulu. com/watch/63314/origins-of-life
Theories of the Origin of Life
Unit 9: Evolution 9.2 Life over Time.
Origin of Life What do you think the first organism was like?
Chapter 1.4 The Origin of Life.
Life on Earth Wednesday, 26 December 2018
Outline 17-2: Earth's Early History
Origin of Life Sunday, April 07, 2019 Learning Target…
How Life Began Wake County Biology Curriculum.
The spontaneous origin of life on Earth
Presentation transcript:

Noadswood Science, 2011

Life On Earth To describe how life on Earth began Monday, June 06, 2016

Life How is it that life on Earth began?

Life Theories Some religions discuss the theory of creation. They believe the world and all the living things on Earth were created by a supernatural or divine being at a particular time in the past The story is told in the book of Genesis in the Old Testament of the Bible. This theory of creation is believed by Jewish and Christian people who take the Bible literally Other religions have their own beliefs about creation – the Muslim creation story is similar in many ways to the Old Testament with Nabi Adam and Stina Houwa replacing Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden

Life Theories In traditional African cultures, there are various beliefs about the origin of life – some peoples believe that humans originated from a cave in the Earth. Other peoples believe that humans originated from elements in nature, such as reeds in water The cosmozoan theory states that life originated from outer space – the ancient Greeks, Chinese and Egyptians believed that life arose many times out of non-living matter (known as the spontaneous generation theory) Another theory, the steady state theory, is that the Earth has no origin and that it has always been able to support life which has remained unchanged throughout time (this theory has largely been disproved)

Early Earth The early Earth was very different to the one we know today – it was hotter and the atmosphere consisted mostly of carbon dioxide, with other gases such as ammonia and methane There are two possible origins for these molecules: - They were produced by the conditions on Earth at the time, or They came from somewhere else, such as another planet in our solar system or further out in space

Early Earth Over many millions of years these molecules joined with other molecules, becoming gradually more complex and dependent on each other The process of evolution by natural selection eventually led to all of the different living things that we see on Earth today

Life Sometime between about 4.1 billion years ago when the Earth’s crust began to solidify, and 3.5 billion years ago life began Most biologists subscribe to the hypothesis that life developed on Earth from non-living materials that became ordered into molecular aggregates These eventually became capable to self-replication and metabolism In the ancient environment the origin of life was evidently possible (conditions were very different, with more intense lightning; volcanic activity; meteorite bombardment; and UV radiation)

First Life One hypothesis suggests the first organisms were products of a chemical evolution in four stages: - 1. The abiotic (non-living) synthesis and accumulation of small organic monomers such as amino acids and nucleotides from a primordial soup 2. The joining of these monomers into polymers (including proteins and nucleic acids) 3. The aggregation of abiotically produced molecules into droplets (protobionts) with chemical characteristics different from their surroundings 4. The origin of heredity

Evidence It is not possible to be certain how life on Earth began because: Earth is about 4,500 million years old There is evidence living things existed on Earth at least 3,500 million years ago No-one was there to record how life began The best we can do is study simple organisms and the chemistry of living things to work out scientific theories The main theory is that living things developed from molecules that could copy themselves, rather as DNA does

Miller Urey Experiment It is not known how life began on the Earth because there is not enough evidence available An experiment by Miller and Urey in 1952 tried to recreate the conditions which may have been present in the Earth’s atmosphere around 3 billion years ago… They used a sealed and sterile glass flask with the gases ammonia, methane, hydrogen and water vapour inside – they then passed electrical sparks (simulating lightning) through the gases for a week…

Miller Urey Experiment When they analysed the mixture they found many carbon compounds had formed inside the flask (from the methane gas) Some of these compounds were found to be amino acids (used to make proteins) This suggests the first life forms may have been bacteria able to utilise the methane and ammonia to live