(Press-News.org) Contact information: Robert Hazen
rhazen@carnegiescience.edu
202-478-8962
Carnegie Institution
Ancient minerals: Which gave rise to life?
Washington, D.C.— Life originated as a result of natural processes that exploited early Earth's raw materials. Scientific models of life's origins almost always look to minerals for such essential tasks as the synthesis of life's molecular building blocks or the supply of metabolic energy. But this assumes that the mineral species found on Earth today are much the same as they were during Earth's first 550 million years—the Hadean Eon—when life emerged. A new analysis of Hadean mineralogy challenges that assumption. It is published in American Journal of Science.
Carnegie's Robert Hazen compiled a list of every plausible mineral species on the Hadean Earth and concludes that no more than 420 different minerals—about 8 percent of the nearly 5,000 species found on Earth today—would have been present at or near Earth's surface.
"This is a consequence of the limited ways that minerals might have formed prior to 4 billion years ago," Hazen explained. "Most of the 420 minerals of the Hadean Eon formed from magma—molten rock that slowly crystallized at or near Earth's surface—as well as the alteration of those minerals when exposed to hot water."
By contrast, thousands of mineral species known today are the direct result of growth by living organisms, such as shells and bones, as well as life's chemical byproducts, such as oxygen from photosynthesis. In addition, hundreds of other minerals that incorporate relatively rare elements such as lithium, beryllium, and molybdenum appear to have taken a billion years or more to first appear because it is difficult to concentrate these elements sufficiently to form new minerals. So those slow-forming minerals are also excluded from the time of life's origins.
"Fortunately for most origin-of-life models, the most commonly invoked minerals were present on early Earth," Hazen said.
For example, clay minerals—sometimes theorized by chemists to trigger interesting reactions—were certainly available. Sulfide minerals, including reactive iron and nickel varieties, were also widely available to catalyze organic reactions. However, borate and molybdate minerals, which are relatively rare even today, are unlikely to have occurred on the Hadean Earth and call into question origin models that rely on those mineral groups.
Several questions remain unanswered and offer opportunities for further study of the paleomineralogy of the Hadean Eon. For example, the Hadean Eon differs from today in the frequent large impacts of asteroids and comets—thousands of collisions by objects with diameters from a mile up to 100 miles. Such impacts would have caused massive disruption of Earth's crust, with extensive fracture zones that were filled with hot circulating water. Such hydrothermal areas could have created complex zones with many exotic minerals.
This study also raises the question of how other planets and moons evolved mineralogically. Hazen suggests that Mars today may have progressed only as far as Earth's Hadean Eon. As such, Mars may be limited to a similar suite of no more than about 400 different mineral species. Thanks to the Curiosity rover, we may soon know if that's the case.
INFORMATION:
This work was supported by the NSF, NASA Astrobiology Institute, the Deep Carbon Observatory and the Carnegie Institution for Science.
The Carnegie Institution for Science is a private, nonprofit organization headquartered in Washington, D.C., with six research departments throughout the U.S. Since its founding in 1902, the Carnegie Institution has been a pioneering force in basic scientific research. Carnegie scientists are leaders in plant biology, developmental biology, astronomy, materials science, global ecology, and Earth and planetary science.
Ancient minerals: Which gave rise to life?
2013-11-26
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Mach 1000 shock wave lights supernova remnant
2013-11-26
Mach 1000 shock wave lights supernova remnant
When a star explodes as a supernova, it shines brightly for a few weeks or months before fading away. Yet the material blasted outward from the explosion still glows hundreds or thousands ...
UCSB biomedical scientist discovers a new method to increase survival in sepsis
2013-11-26
UCSB biomedical scientist discovers a new method to increase survival in sepsis
The findings have the potential to translate into millions of saved lives
(Santa Barbara, Calif.) — Sepsis, the body's response to severe infections, kills more people ...
Nanotubes can solder themselves, markedly improving device performance
2013-11-26
Nanotubes can solder themselves, markedly improving device performance
CHAMPAIGN, Ill. — University of Illinois researchers have developed a way to heal gaps in wires too small for even the world's tiniest soldering iron.
Led by electrical ...
Increasing cropping frequency offers opportunity to boost food supply
2013-11-26
Increasing cropping frequency offers opportunity to boost food supply
More frequent harvest could substantially boost global food production on existing agricultural lands
MINNEAPOLIS / ST. PAUL (11/25/2013) —Harvesting existing cropland more frequently could substantially ...
Bad proteins branch out
2013-11-26
Bad proteins branch out
Rice U. researchers find misfolded proteins are capable of forming tree-like aggregates
HOUSTON – (Nov. 25, 2013) – A method by Rice University researchers to model the way proteins fold – and sometimes misfold – has revealed branching behavior that ...
CSI-type study identifies snakehead
2013-11-26
CSI-type study identifies snakehead
Several Canadian biologists, including two at Simon Fraser University, are breathing a collective sigh of relief after learning that a monstrous fish found in a Burnaby, B.C. pond is not a northern snakehead.
But they say ...
Sounding rocket to peek at atmosphere of Venus
2013-11-26
Sounding rocket to peek at atmosphere of Venus
A week after launching a new orbiter to investigate the upper atmosphere of Mars, NASA is sending a sounding rocket to probe the atmosphere of Venus.
The Mars Atmosphere and Volatile Evolution, ...
Study: Arctic seafloor methane releases double previous estimates
2013-11-26
Study: Arctic seafloor methane releases double previous estimates
Storm activity hastens release of greenhouse gas into the atmosphere
The seafloor off the coast of Northern Siberia is releasing more than twice the amount of methane as previously ...
Risk of HIV treatment failure present even in those with low viral load
2013-11-26
Risk of HIV treatment failure present even in those with low viral load
Study proposes new benchmarks for clinical treatment of HIV
People with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) run a higher risk of virologic failure than previously thought, even ...
MR spectroscopy shows differences in brains of preterm infants
2013-11-26
MR spectroscopy shows differences in brains of preterm infants
CHICAGO – Premature birth appears to trigger developmental processes in the white matter of the brain that could put children at higher risk of problems later in life, according to a study ...