Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 October 2009
Introduction
It is a widely held view that life will arise spontaneously on the surface of any planet that provides a suitable physical and chemical environment. This belief is saved from tautology by the generously broad definitions of ‘suitable’ that abound in discussions of the origin of life. Indeed it is almost sufficient to require only that liquid water occur on the planet's surface, for then it follows that the atmospheric pressure and ambient temperature will be in ranges that promote a rich variety of organic reactions.
On the ancient Earth, as today, the simultaneous presence of the three states of matter along terrestrial shorelines provided reaction sites and macroscopic transport for most of the planet's chemicals. The temperature was low enough to confer a substantial lifetime on thermodynamically improbable molecules formed in sunlit waters, yet high enough to give speed to the processes of chemistry, and to the evolution of life. The importance of speed in chemistry and evolution is emphasized by the reflection that a cooler planet than ours, where reaction rates were one-fourth as great, would see its sun burn away from the main sequence of stars before it witnessed intelligent life.
This standard scenario of life's origin has been strengthened greatly by the outcome of laboratory experiments in geochemistry (Fox & Dose, 1972). They show that the assumed primitive molecules of our planet's early atmosphere, if supplied with free energy, could form sugars, amino acids, purines, pyrimidines and other life-related organic substances.
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