Milestones in Evolution, Video 3 - EART22101 - Palaeobiology and Evolution - 2023

00:12:27
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=igIfaqfg5fo

Summary

TLDRThe video explains the early evolution of life on Earth after abiogenesis, focusing on the role of RNA and DNA as crucial informational molecules. It discusses the potential existence of simpler nucleic acids, like TNA and PNA, prior to RNA, and highlights the RNA world theory where RNA was the primary molecule for life functions. The concept of the last Universal common ancestor (Luca) is introduced, which connects all current life forms. The video further describes the classifications of life into prokaryotes (like bacteria and archaea) and eukaryotes, presenting fossil evidence from Australia dated at 3.4 billion years old, believed to represent some of the earliest life forms. These findings contribute to ongoing research about early life on Earth.

Takeaways

  • 🧬 Life began with simple molecules like TNA and PNA before RNA.
  • 🔄 The RNA world hypothesis suggests early life relied on RNA for functions.
  • 🌳 Luca is the last Universal common ancestor of all life on Earth.
  • 🦠 Prokaryotes include bacteria and archaea, fundamental early life forms.
  • 📜 Fossil evidence, like those from Australia, supports traces of ancient life.

Timeline

  • 00:00:00 - 00:12:27

    Continuing from the previous summary, the video details the fundamental splits in the tree of life, primarily focusing on prokaryotes, which are divided into bacteria and archaea. It describes the characteristics of prokaryotes, including their lack of a nucleus and organelles, with an emphasis on the significance of these organisms in understanding early life's origins. The speaker introduces evidence from the fossil record indicating the presence of prokaryotic life on Earth, calling attention to ongoing debates regarding isotopic ratios and traces of life found in ancient rocks. The video concludes with a discussion of 3.4 billion-year-old fossils from Australia, which are considered compelling evidence of early prokaryotic organisms.

Mind Map

Video Q&A

  • What is abiogenesis?

    Abiogenesis refers to the natural process of life arising from non-living matter, such as simple organic compounds.

  • What is the RNA world hypothesis?

    The RNA world hypothesis suggests that early life may have relied solely on RNA for information storage and biochemical functions.

  • What is Luca?

    Luca stands for the last Universal common ancestor, the shared ancestor from which all life on Earth descends.

  • What are prokaryotes?

    Prokaryotes are unicellular organisms lacking a nucleus, including bacteria and archaea.

  • What evidence is there for early life on Earth?

    Early life evidence is often found in the fossil record, with 3.4 billion-year-old fossils being one of the best-supported examples.

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  • 00:00:00
    yo what's up in this video we're going
  • 00:00:03
    to have a look at early Evolution so
  • 00:00:05
    thank you for coming back so let's have
  • 00:00:07
    a look at what happened shortly after
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    abiogenesis which we met in the last
  • 00:00:11
    video and let's look at a period when
  • 00:00:14
    life was getting a foothold on Earth so
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    if there's one thing I can tell you
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    about this time period is that there are
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    lots and lots of Fairly open questions
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    that remain much like those questions
  • 00:00:24
    that we saw when we were looking at a
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    biogenesis and the different theories by
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    which that may have originated so things
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    that I can tell you for sure are the
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    life nowaday uses RNA shown on the left
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    hand side of this image here and DNA on
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    the right hand side of this image as
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    informational molecules these are long
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    molecules and as I said they are
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    generally informational they store
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    information for living
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    things what happened immediately after a
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    biogenesis is still very poorly known
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    but what we think may have happened is
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    that longer and um increasing numbers of
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    molecules were created through the
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    evolution of early
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    life now um we think that uh simpler
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    molecules than RNA that's shown here may
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    have been around first for example there
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    is a thing called TNA this is uh 30's
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    nucleic acid or PNA peptide nucle
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    nucleic acid another form of long long
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    molecule but with a different kind of
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    backbone may have existed before
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    rned the evidence for that is is lacking
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    um we don't have rocks from this time
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    period or indeed any remnants of uh the
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    biochemistry of the things that were
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    alive in this period to test that idea
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    but it kind of as a first principle
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    makes sense that we may want to start
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    off with a simpler molecule than
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    RNA after that however most people do
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    agree that there was a period um in
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    which life was all RNA based it used
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    this molecule uh shown on the left here
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    which was we call the RNA world so RNA
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    is a kind of like an allinone molecule
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    it's it's generally single stranded has
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    one backbone as opposed to DNA which has
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    two and as well as storing information
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    it can catalyze reactions there are
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    things called rymes that catalyze
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    reactions and this means that rnas have
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    the capacity to carry out a wide range
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    of important biochemical functions and
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    they would have been a very good
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    candidate for the earlier informational
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    molecules um before the Advent of DNA
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    during this time um we think as well as
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    having the evolution of RNA after the
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    origin of life we would have seen the
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    origin of cells to house and prot
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    protect genetic
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    molecules at some point or also there
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    must have been a switch towards DNA as
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    opposed to RNA and that kind of actually
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    does make a bit again of first principal
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    sense RNA is relatively unstable
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    compared to DNA for example uh the M you
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    know viruses tend to use RNA and there
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    could even be a hangover of the RNA
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    world one of the reasons you and I um
  • 00:03:24
    get colds many years and indeed why
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    covid is kind of moving across the world
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    still going into new forms is because
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    RNA is relatively unstable so viruses
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    mutate relatively quickly that can help
  • 00:03:37
    you uh survive if you're a virus that
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    takes advantage I suppose of other um
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    cells that do your application for you
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    but if you want a
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    longstore um repository of your genetic
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    information maybe that's not so good and
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    so DNA is actually a better solution to
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    storing your genetic
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    information so that must happened at
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    some point after abiogenesis of
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    course so by this uh point in kind of
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    your your reading and your education you
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    may well have come across this idea that
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    all life is related and we can place it
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    onto a evolutionary tree and this is one
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    example of such an evolutionary tree
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    otherwise known as a
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    cladogram so this is a cogram that shows
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    the relationship between all different
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    forms of of life just arranged into a
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    circle to make it a bit more compressed
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    and make make it so I can fit it onto a
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    single slide um this shows the
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    relationships between all major groups
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    of organisms that are alive on Earth
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    today if you think about this um kind of
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    idea of a tree and implication of that
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    and the theory of evolution and
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    hierarchical nesting and branching of
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    forms is that at some point there must
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    have been a population of organisms from
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    which everything that is alive today
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    descends that's marked by the star on
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    this clayr here and this is a thing that
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    is called the last Universal common
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    ancestor which is often abbreviated to
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    Luca as shown here I'm going to be
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    saying Luca um for the rest of this
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    video because it just makes life a lot
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    easier we can tell by looking at what
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    all life shares some elements of the bio
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    biochemistry of Luca so for for example
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    we can say that it must have had
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    ribosomes to make protein it probably
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    had DNA to store its genetic information
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    and it had chromosome something that
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    we'll get on to
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    later other details such as what kind of
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    organism it might have been and other
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    elements of its physiology are slightly
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    harder to get at but actually this is an
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    area of really active research people
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    are using the shared genetic Heritage of
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    all life at the moment to rebuild a kind
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    of a
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    an idea of the repertoire of different
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    genes Luca might have had and then you
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    are using that to say something about
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    how it metabolized and so that's a
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    really interesting and exciting area at
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    the moment and if you want to explore
  • 00:06:14
    this um Tree of Life further you can do
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    so at this URL here which I will link to
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    um below this video so you can actually
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    start explor the inter relationships
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    between these groups
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    so if we're thinking about life um in
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    this tree likee framework and we're
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    thinking about what happened after this
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    last Universal common ancestor we can
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    say that there are three fairly
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    fundamental splits in the tree of life
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    the pro cariot that's a word that I put
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    on the the the bottom here the procar is
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    a shorthand term for two of those three
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    um uh spits those two two of those
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    groups that um represent an early
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    branching in the tree of life and those
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    proc carats are members of the groups
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    the bacteria and the archa these are
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    organisms that look like what you can
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    see give or take on this slide
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    here um 10,000 species of pro cariot
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    have been described and these are
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    organisms that split by binary fish and
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    they just kind of generally pop po a
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    clone they are normally smaller than 10
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    microns in size um this is a a kind of a
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    very simplified diagram showing many of
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    the um elements of the architecture of
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    their cells that they share their cells
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    lack a nucleus or any form of internal
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    membrane bound structure those are
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    things that we call organel in organisms
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    that have them they the um Pro cariot
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    these ARA and the bacteria um contain in
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    their cytoplasm in the middle of their
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    cell uh a single Loop of DNA
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    and the differences between those two
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    groups of proar the ARA and the bacteria
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    um generally revolve around the
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    chemistry of their cell wall that
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    surrounds the cell and the methods by
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    which they synthesize proteins from
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    their DNA that process that I talked
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    about a couple of videos back now the AR
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    include the
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    methanogenic um archan the those that
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    metabolize methane in anoxic conditions
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    and for example the bacteria include
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    photosynthesizing cyano
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    bacteria so that's a a very very brief
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    overview of the pro carots for you so
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    it's then um very likely that the
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    earliest traces of life on Earth we will
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    see in the fossil record probably
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    represent a pro cariot grade of
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    organization because the other group of
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    organisms that includes fungi and
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    animals for example we think uh results
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    from uh Evolution based on Pro carots
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    and of the different procar
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    groups and there is a fair amount of
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    debatable evidence for traces of life
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    from early Earth so a lot of these will
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    try and use uh geochemistry of rocks to
  • 00:09:28
    unravel when life may have appeared for
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    example that will often include um isot
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    isotope ratios of carbon in early rocks
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    that are carbon rich and there are even
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    papers that kind of talk about potential
  • 00:09:43
    fossils all the way back to 4.2 billion
  • 00:09:47
    years ago I would say that all of those
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    need to be very carefully considered and
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    more um competing um potential pieces of
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    evidence for early over life keep on
  • 00:10:01
    appearing and in all of these there is a
  • 00:10:04
    rich ongoing debate about the strengths
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    and the weaknesses of the different
  • 00:10:09
    forms of evidence for early life on
  • 00:10:11
    Earth um I don't have time sadly in this
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    lecture to give you chapter and verse on
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    all of that so I thought I would finish
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    this video by introducing um these
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    3.4 billion year old um fossils from a
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    place called strell pool in um in
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    Australia which I think is arguably the
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    best supported evidence fossil evidence
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    we have for early life well you can see
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    examples um photographs of the
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    structures that are found in
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    uh uh silicon dioxide Rock from early
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    Earth at the top here and in this
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    paper all the papers that I have
  • 00:10:56
    reference the bottom here the authors
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    even to conduct 3D reconstructions to
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    allow us to understand the morphology of
  • 00:11:03
    these structures slightly better and I
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    believe that these teams of researchers
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    make a convincing case based on both the
  • 00:11:12
    morphology the shape of these structures
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    and their chemistry to suggest that
  • 00:11:19
    these May well be the uh reliable early
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    traces of a pro cariot type organism and
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    the arguments from chemistry surround
  • 00:11:30
    not only chemistry that may reflect um
  • 00:11:33
    their original makeup but help but also
  • 00:11:37
    reflect arguments regarding how they may
  • 00:11:40
    have been preserved in the environment
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    in which they were
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    living so those are if the um these
  • 00:11:48
    authors are correct those are indigenous
  • 00:11:51
    microfossils preserved within a beach
  • 00:11:54
    rock um dripstone fabric so these could
  • 00:11:58
    be traced the amongst the earliest
  • 00:12:00
    traces of life on Earth that were
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    actually preserved in situ from a really
  • 00:12:05
    ancient Beach and I think that's really
  • 00:12:06
    really cool and they're 3.4 billion
  • 00:12:09
    years old so that's still quite old and
  • 00:12:12
    a really nice example of potential
  • 00:12:15
    fossils of early life on
  • 00:12:17
    Earth and that brings me to the end of
  • 00:12:20
    this video so I will see you very
  • 00:12:22
    shortly in the next one take care
Tags
  • Evolution
  • Abiogenesis
  • RNA
  • DNA
  • Luca
  • Prokaryotes
  • Fossils
  • Early Life
  • Cladogram
  • Microfossils