Could life arise twice on the same planet?
That’s the question I posed to both Oleg Abramov, a research space
scientist at the USGS’ Astrogeology Science Center in Flagstaff and
Steve Mojzsis, a geologist at the University of Colorado in Boulder.
“Life evolves, adapts and spreads pretty
quickly on timescales of millions of years,” said Abramov. “So, it’s
pretty difficult to sterilize a planet.”
However, because earth was habitable long before the era of massive,
surface-sterilizing asteroidal and cometary impacts had ended, a few
researchers think there’s a chance that life might have even evolved
more than once.
Aside from a highly-anomalous moon-forming type impactor, once life
takes hold on a given planet, it’s actually more resilient than commonly
thought. So, impactors of the sort that would actually sterilize a
life-rich planet in order for it to emerge all over again are actually
few and far between.
That’s because microbes can survive deep in our crust. So-called
thermophile bacteria are arguably our most distant ancestors. It’s
thought that these high-temperature loving micro-organisms could ride
out massive bombardments by surviving in very warm environments; like
near deep-sea hydrothermal vents, or even kms beneath earth’s crust.
Abramov says that even impacts during the Late Heavy Bombardment (or
LHB), the putative spike in the number of impacts from Main Belt
Asteroids some 3.9 billion years ago would probably not have been enough
to vaporize the oceans.
Thus, Mojzsis says the commonly held view is that life on earth
emerged sometime at or before the LHB. That’s well “after” the
cataclysmic impact event that formed our moon, some 4.53 billion years
ago.
Hence the “window” for the emergence of life on our planet, says
Mojzsis, is in earth’s geological “dark ages” between 4.51 and 3.9
billion years ago.
“I strongly suspect that the origin of life happened on [earth], not
much later than 4.4 billion years ago,” said Mojzsis. “That’s when we
have the first direct evidence for chemically evolved crust interacting
with liquid water in the form of the oldest terrestrial minerals from
Western Australia.”
Abramov points out that living microbes have been found kms below the
surface deep in the earth’s crust. Thus, he reasons that if those areas
were already colonized at the time of the Late Heavy Bombardment, then
it would have been exceedingly difficult to sterilize such deep
subsurfaces.
“I’m running computer models that simulate the thermal conditions in
the entire crust of the earth during various bombardment scenarios,”
said Abramov. “What I’m seeing from the vast majority of my simulations
is that it’s quite difficult to sterilize the planet using impacts.”
If a bombardment-type scenario is not enough to sterilize a planet
once life had started, what would be enough to do it?
An extremely large impact, like the impact that formed the moon, says
Abramov.
“Essentially, you would have to melt most of the crust and heat the
remainder of the crust to a temperature that’s not survivable by any
kind of micro-organism,” said Abramov.
What are we learning about how life evolved and held on here on earth
that can be applied to astrobiology in general?
Impacts and planetary bombardments, Abramov says, may in fact have a
net positive effect on the processes leading to the origin and evolution
of early life. They not only deliver essential elements for life, he
says, but also create hydrothermal systems that may have provided a site
for life’s origin.
Mojzsis says no one knows how life originates, but geologists can
answer the question “when could life have emerged?” using geochemical
tools and physical models.
He notes that after the moon-forming event about 30-80 million years
after the solar system formed, it took something like 2-3 million years
for the earth to cool sufficiently to have a rocky surface rind
(proto-crust) upon which liquid water could condense.
“Once you have that at the global scale,” said Mojzsis, “then the
planet’s pre-biotic chemical reactor could perform its work.”
Could earth life have arisen before the moon-forming impact?
“If there was life on earth before the giant impact that formed the
moon, it was completely destroyed,” said Mojzsis. “But [since] Mars did
not experience a moon-forming impact on the scale of earth’s, perhaps
Mars is where we can answer [this] question.”
Martian subsurface hotspots that still generate occasional
hydrothermal activity might provide habitats for life even in the
present day, says Abramov. Even so, he says, we’d have to drill several
kms down to get to them.
But from what we know now, is microbial life likely to be ubiquitous
in the galaxy?
“That’s still a big open question,” said Abramov. “We just don’t know
if what happened on earth was unique or, given the right conditions,
life starts easily.”
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