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- From: rh@smds.com (Richard Harter)
- Newsgroups: talk.origins
- Subject: Re: Abiogenesis of multicellular organisms
- Message-ID: <1992Nov18.115341.17476@smds.com>
- Date: 18 Nov 92 11:53:41 GMT
- References: <1992Nov18.033140.23517@galois.mit.edu>
- Reply-To: rh@ishmael.UUCP (Richard Harter)
- Organization: Software Maintenance & Development Systems, Inc.
- Lines: 40
-
- In article <1992Nov18.033140.23517@galois.mit.edu> tycchow@riesz.mit.edu (Timothy Y. Chow) writes:
- >Here's something that I don't understand very well, and haven't been able to
- >find discussed in any detail anywhere. Consider an organism that
-
- >1. Does not exist today but whose fossils do exist;
- >2. Appears "suddenly" in the fossil record;
- >3. Is the only representative of its phylum in the fossil record;
- >4. Is macroscopic.
- >
- >I don't know of any examples offhand, but I'm sure they exist. Call this
- >organism the Lone Wolf. Consider now:
-
- Timothy raises the question as to why we don't expect to see new
- instances of abiogenesis.
-
- The conventional answer is that in any plausible abiogenetic scenario
- there is a period of accumulation of complex organic molecules. This
- accumulation can only take place in the absence of life; otherwise the
- complex organics will be consumed. However bacterial life is omni-present;
- ergo abiogenesis is a one time event.
-
- The probability of the "lone wolf" is much worse than that of the
- single prokaryote cell. Multi-cellular life is eukaryotic; the
- eukaryote cell is the product of multiple inclusions of prokaryote
- symbiotes with subsequent loss of genetic information by the symbiotes.
-
- Ignoring this difficulty, there is the consideration that multi-cellular
- life has a reproductive cycle. The lone wolf presumably would form as
- a zygote; it would also have to have built into its genetic code, just
- by chance, all of the genes for controlling reproduction.
-
- In short, such a lone wolf, if it arose, would not be a eukaryote. As
- such it would be so different that it would occupy its own kingdom.
- Nothing like this has ever been observed; it would be quite exciting
- if it were.
- --
- Richard Harter: SMDS Inc. Net address: rh@smds.com Phone: 508-369-7398
- US Mail: SMDS Inc., PO Box 555, Concord MA 01742. Fax: 508-369-8272
- In the fields of Hell where the grass grows high
- Are the graves of dreams allowed to die.
-