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Keyword: millerexperiment

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  • Organic-Rich Soup-in-the-Ocean of Early Earth [Miller experiment revisited]

    04/08/2005 7:39:14 AM PDT · by PatrickHenry · 665 replies · 5,440+ views
    REDNOVA NEWS ^ | 08 April 2005 | Staff
    A new University of Colorado at Boulder study indicates Earth in its infancy probably had substantial quantities of hydrogen in its atmosphere, a surprising finding that may alter the way many scientists think about how life began on the planet. Published in the April 7 issue of Science Express, the online edition of Science Magazine, the study concludes traditional models estimating hydrogen escape from Earth's atmosphere several billions of years ago are flawed. The new study indicates up to 40 percent of the early atmosphere was hydrogen, implying a more favorable climate for the production of pre-biotic organic compounds like...
  • Calculations favor reducing atmosphere for early earth: Was Miller-Urey experiment correct?

    09/12/2005 6:39:36 AM PDT · by PatrickHenry · 62 replies · 1,144+ views
    Washington University in St. Louis ^ | 07 September 2005 | Tony Fitzpatrick
    Using primitive meteorites called chondrites as their models, earth and planetary scientists at Washington University in St. Louis have performed outgassing calculations and shown that the early Earth's atmosphere was a reducing one, chock full of methane, ammonia, hydrogen and water vapor. In making this discovery Bruce Fegley, Ph.D., Washington University professor of earth and planetary sciences in Arts & Sciences, and Laura Schaefer, laboratory assistant, reinvigorate one of the most famous and controversial theories on the origins of life, the 1953 Miller-Urey experiment, which yielded organic compounds necessary to evolve organisms. Chondrites are relatively unaltered samples of material from...
  • Prebiotic Soup--Revisiting the Miller Experiment [biogenesis]

    11/02/2003 10:30:46 AM PST · by PatrickHenry · 306 replies · 3,676+ views
    Science Magazine ^ | May 2003 | Jeffrey L. Bada and Antonio Lazcano
    "Isn't life wonderful?" sang Alma Cogan and Les Howard in their almost forgotten 1953 hit. That same year, Stanley L. Miller raised the hopes of understanding the origin of life when on 15 May, Science published his paper on the synthesis of amino acids under conditions that simulated primitive Earth's atmosphere (1). Miller had applied an electric discharge to a mixture of CH4, NH3, H2O, and H2--believed at the time to be the atmospheric composition of early Earth. Surprisingly, the products were not a random mixture of organic molecules, but rather a relatively small number of biochemically significant compounds such...