Clay theory of the
origin of life
A hypothesis for the origin of life based on clay was forwarded by Dr
A. Graham Cairns-Smith of Glasgow University in 1985 and adopted as a
plausible illustration by just a handful of other scientists (including
Richard Dawkins). Clay theory postulates complex organic molecules arising
gradually on a pre-existing, non-organic replication platform - silicate
crystals in solution. Complexity in companion molecules developed as a
function of selection pressures on types of clay crystal is then exapted
to serve the replication of organic molecules independently of their silicate
"launch stage".
Cairns-Smith is a staunch critic of other models of chemical evolution
(see Genetic Takeover: And the Mineral Origins of Life ISBN 0-52123-312-7).
However, he admits, that like many models of the origin of life, his own
also has its shortcomings (Horgan 1991).
"Deep-hot biosphere"
model of Gold
A controversial theory put forward by Thomas Gold in the 1990s has life
first developing not on the surface of the earth, but several kilometers
below the surface. It is now known that microbial life is plentiful up
to five kilometers below the earth's surface in the form of archaea, which
are generally considered to have originated around the same time or earlier
than bacteria, most of which live on the surface including the oceans.
It is claimed that discovery of microbial life below the surface of another
body in our solar system would lend significant credence to this theory.
He also noted that a trickle of food from a deep, unreachable, source
promotes survival because life arising in a puddle of organic material
is likely to consume all of its food and become extinct.
"Primitive"
extraterrestrial life
An alternative to Earthly abiogenesis is the hypothesis that primitive
life may have originally formed extraterrestrially (note that exogenesis
is related to, but is not the same as the notion of panspermia). Organic
compounds are relatively common in space, especially in the outer solar
system where volatiles are not evaporated by solar heating. Comets are
encrusted by outer layers of dark material, thought to be a tar-like substance
composed of complex organic material formed from simple carbon compounds
after reactions initiated mostly by irradiation by ultraviolet light.
It is supposed that a rain of cometary material on the early Earth could
have brought significant quantities of complex organic molecules, and
that it is possible that primitive life itself may have formed in space
was brought to the surface along with it. A related hypothesis holds that
life may have formed first on early Mars, and been transported to Earth
when crustal material was blasted off of Mars by asteroid and comet impacts
to later fall to Earth's surface. Both of these hypotheses are even more
difficult to find evidence for, and may have to wait for samples to be
taken from comets and Mars for study, and neither of them actually answers
the question of where life first originated, merely shifting it to another
planet/comet.
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