Who: J.B.S. Haldane, a brilliant biologist. When: Way back in 1929. What: He described the pre-biotic (before life) ocean as a "hot dilute soup" of carbon compounds.
Who: Stanley Miller and Harold Urey, the daring duo of scientists. When: The early 1950s. What: They cooked up a literal science experiment to test Haldane's theory.
Ingredients and Steps
Methane, hydrogen, and ammonia: The believed gases of pre-biotic atmosphere.
Water vapor: Added by boiling water.
Electrical discharges: To simulate lightning. (Talk about a high-voltage recipe!)
Condenser: This cooled down the hot mix and sent it back to the boiling water.
The Big Reveal
Day 1: The water turned pink. Imagine a science-made cherry lemonade!
Week 1: The water was dark red, like a raspberry smoothie.
Analysis: Over 20 different amino acids were produced. Amino acids are like LEGO blocks for proteins, a key part of life.
The Miller-Urey experiment proved that it was possible to form carbon compounds spontaneously on Earth before life started. Think of it as the universe's recipe for life!
Have you ever mixed baking soda and vinegar to create a volcano for a science fair? That's a simple chemical reaction. Now, imagine that on a grand scale, with the Earth cooking up essential life ingredients through complex reactions.
Dive deeper and gain exclusive access to premium files of Biology HL. Subscribe now and get closer to that 45 🌟
Who: J.B.S. Haldane, a brilliant biologist. When: Way back in 1929. What: He described the pre-biotic (before life) ocean as a "hot dilute soup" of carbon compounds.
Who: Stanley Miller and Harold Urey, the daring duo of scientists. When: The early 1950s. What: They cooked up a literal science experiment to test Haldane's theory.
Ingredients and Steps
Methane, hydrogen, and ammonia: The believed gases of pre-biotic atmosphere.
Water vapor: Added by boiling water.
Electrical discharges: To simulate lightning. (Talk about a high-voltage recipe!)
Condenser: This cooled down the hot mix and sent it back to the boiling water.
The Big Reveal
Day 1: The water turned pink. Imagine a science-made cherry lemonade!
Week 1: The water was dark red, like a raspberry smoothie.
Analysis: Over 20 different amino acids were produced. Amino acids are like LEGO blocks for proteins, a key part of life.
The Miller-Urey experiment proved that it was possible to form carbon compounds spontaneously on Earth before life started. Think of it as the universe's recipe for life!
Have you ever mixed baking soda and vinegar to create a volcano for a science fair? That's a simple chemical reaction. Now, imagine that on a grand scale, with the Earth cooking up essential life ingredients through complex reactions.
Dive deeper and gain exclusive access to premium files of Biology HL. Subscribe now and get closer to that 45 🌟