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RomneyLies

(3,333 posts)
6. Not necessarily
Thu Dec 20, 2012, 02:21 PM
Dec 2012

It could have happened in multiple vents in multiple undersea locations. It doesn't necessarily follow that a single event in a single hydrothermic vent produced all life that exists today or has every existed.

In fact, the abundance and diversity of life before the Permian-Triassic extinction event would suggest that life may well have begun in multiple events.

Interesting, Sir The Magistrate Dec 2012 #1
That's why it's crucial to keep your membranes intact. postulater Dec 2012 #2
A rare chemistry indeed Eddie Haskell Dec 2012 #3
Here at least AldoLeopold Dec 2012 #5
Not necessarily RomneyLies Dec 2012 #6
Good point. DavidDvorkin Dec 2012 #9
So far we've not found one ... Eddie Haskell Dec 2012 #10
We have no clue where life began RomneyLies Dec 2012 #12
It's possible Eddie Haskell Dec 2012 #13
A testable hypothesis exboyfil Dec 2012 #4
I favor Stuart Kauffman's proposal that the catalytic cycles evolved first phantom power Dec 2012 #7
Cool. Or, more accurately, hot. Warren DeMontague Dec 2012 #8
mind, blown. JaneyVee Dec 2012 #11
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