Are there any books or sites that detail, step-by-step, the evolution of the first single-celled organisms (bacteria, archaea) from a Miller-Urey-like beginning? That is, assumes only amino acids, then from there to self-replicating proteins, until culminating in the formation of a basic cell?
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Origin of Life: Chemical Approach is an edited volume by Piet Herdewijn and M. Volkan Kisakürek. here is the book's description from the webpage:
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I quite like the account given in Early evolution without a tree of life, where alkaline hydrothermal vents (like "Lost City") are theorized to have formed pre-biotic compartments with a proton gradient (i.e. an energy source) from which cells could have evolved. |
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From a more geology-oriented perspective: Robert M Hazen (2007) - Genesis: The Scientific Quest for Life's Origins Noam Lahav (1999)- Biogenesis: Theories of Life's Origin J William Schopf (2001) - Cradle of Life I have watched Hazen's nice "Origins of Life" DVD/Video Course. There he says that the Miller-Urey stuff has gotten less popular. Their atmosphere contains too much Nitrogen, Hydrogen and focuses on the water surface and the open water body. More recent research points to a more CO2-rich atmosphere, and that life evolved deeper in hot water at the bottom of the ocean. |
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