Study Puts Hole In Comet Theory Of Life's Origin 204
Astervitude writes "A new study by US and Japanese scientists has put a serious dent into one version of the popular panspermia theory that credits comets for bringing the seeds of life to Earth. Surveys conducted by the University of Arizona, the National Astronomical Observatory of Japan and others now show that objects from the main asteroid belt between Jupiter and Mars were largely responsible for the period of Late Heavy Bombardment that ended 3.9 billion years ago. UA Professor Emeritus Robert Strom believes that no more than 10 percent of the Earth's water comes from comets and any oceans then extant would have been 'vaporized by the asteroid impacts during the cataclysm.'" Interesting, because this directly contradicts the Nova mini-series Origins that just finished running on PBS. Science never stops moving.
So... (Score:5, Funny)
Shocking!
Re:So... (Score:4, Interesting)
But then again... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:But then again... (Score:5, Funny)
Which means that there is only a 20% chance that the study that shows that "80% of studies are wrong" is right.
Which means that we have no idea what the probability of error is without doing a lot more studies on the subject.
My head hurts.
Oh, but think of the funding opportunities! (Score:2)
nxtr: 80 percent of all studies are wrong...
sbaker: Which means that there is only a 20% chance that the study that shows that "80% of studies are wrong" is right. Which means that we have no idea what the probability of error is without doing a lot more studies on the subject.
Which means we'll just have to commission a bunch of "scientists" to study the matter further.
Ain't life grand as a "scientist" at the teat of the government sow? It's a win-win proposition, no matter whether you're wrong or yo
Re:But then again... (Score:2)
Which means that there is only a 20% chance that the study that shows that "80% of studies are wrong" is right.
That's a pity though. Suppose the study was exactly right. Then the people who did that study have a way to tell which studies are true and which are not.
All we'd need to do then is submit all studies made to that panel, _before_ publication. We'd get to 100% immediately!
Re:But then again... (Score:2)
Think about it. 50 percent is correct. Science builds on itself, therefore as long as at some time, some of the ideas being discussed are in fact correct, science as we understand the term will progress.
It is a misunderstanding of how Science progresses that would lead someone to think that anywhere near 100 percent of papers discussed were accurate, is needed.
Well duh! (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Genesis Therories (Score:2)
Re:Genesis Therories (Score:3)
You only responded to one part of his statement, but I'm more curious as to what others think of the other half. Personally I agree with that point.
Re:Genesis Therories (Score:5, Insightful)
Which is why it's important for people to learn about science before tehy accept its knowledge. Just like it's important for us to learn about religion. Not just to learn the science, like reading it in _Discover_ magazine, or to learn the religion, like reading it in a bible. But we need to learn how the "knowledge system" works: its history, its failures, its successes, its alternatives and their histories. Just like we don't need to learn enough science to be scientists in order to appreciate science (and our world that it explains), we don't need to become experts in the discipline, to become scientists or clerics. We need to understand what the strengths and limitations are, and what it means when a scientist or a cleric says "we know", "I believe" or "this is". Otherwise, we're just faking it, and we will make all kind of mistakes, without ways to recover. And that's very dangerous, considering how powerful are these ways of knowing, whether they're right or (especially when) they're wrong.
Re:Genesis Therories (Score:2)
1 + 1 >= 3 is pretty good math if the left-hand side represents a fertile male and female of some given species.
Re:Genesis Therories (Score:2)
Re:Genesis Therories (Score:2)
Re:Genesis Therories (Score:2, Insightful)
That's just because such "theories" either ignore any inconvenient facts, or revise the "theory of Creation" so that it is impossible to disprove (and then pretend that's what the "theory" said all along). Eventually, they can say (like you did) that their theory has been stable longer than the physically-testable theories, and is therefore somehow "bett
Re:Genesis Therories (Score:5, Interesting)
That is because ignorance is stable.
Perhaps it would be better if science types started using rhetoric like "We Think" or "We Believe" instead of "We now know..."
We 'science types' usually do. The problem is that if we start saying 'we believe' too much in public, our ideas get attacked as 'just another form of religion'.
I mean, the version of Darwinism that was taught in my school has pretty much been shot to heck, but my Biology teacher sure enough said, "This is how it happened."
That is because the science taught at school has to be simplified hugely. The version of almost any scientific idea taught at school is largely wrong. The idea is to open minds to the principles of science.
Re:Genesis Therories (Score:2)
is another religion. Also you point out that school is a place to condition minds. Very much in the same way cults do.
I did not say school was a place to 'condition' minds. I said it was a place to open them up. Teaching the principles of science along with the ability to be critical and investigative
Re:Genesis Therories (Score:2)
No. I was saying the exact opposite. Opponents of science mistakenly label it as faith. On the contrary, science is about not requiring faith; about testing belief.
You also admit that science uses schools to condition minds the same way a cult would.
No I don't. Science attempts to prevent the conditioning of minds by encouraging questioning and critical thinking.
Re:Genesis Therories (Score:2)
Things like washing our hands is counter intutive to a culture that doesn't know what germs are. I noticed you didn't comment on that. Please, tell me how the Jews evolved to wash their hands before eating before the discovery of germs? It was written in their laws. Also, why didn't the Jews reject this God of theirs? He was strict, they didn't like him much because of His rules, why didn't they just
Re:Genesis Therories (Score:2)
It is very common and natural in a large number of animals. Anyone who things homosexuality is purely a human activity is showing nothing more than ignorance of biology. In our close relatives the bonobo chimps, same-sex activity is as common as heterosexuality.
Things like washing our hands is counter intutive to a culture that doesn't know what germs are. I noticed you didn't comment on that.
Because you didn'
Re:Genesis Therories (Score:2)
You talk about free will. I guess this is why I think that there is a creative God
Re:Genesis Therories (Score:2)
The problem is that no matter how much you feel or want to believe something does not make you right!
We aren't unique: we share the same biology and biochemistry as almost every other living organism.
If you hit a series of dominos in exactly the same way under the exact same condition then they should fall down exactly the same way.
Again, you are simply factually
Re:Genesis Therories (Score:2)
Re:Genesis Therories (Score:2)
What truth? It is about faith, not truth.
C.S. Lewis wrote about this whole combining everything idea in his book "Mere Christianity".
Why should I accept anything he says? He is not qualified to comment on science.
As for Quantum Mechanics and Chaos Theory, what decides which way the domino falls?
Nothing, as far as we can tell.
After a time passes in our linear existance, we can't go back. Time moves only one way. That is how time
Re:Genesis Therories (Score:2)
For instance, with inbreeding, remember that humans performed genetic engineering many thousands of years ago: domestication of animals via selective breeding.
However, in any generation there are a lot of young people or dumb people likely to make these mistakes and that is what Leviticus is for.
I think we constantly underestimate how sophisticated ancient societies were.
So why does this contradict panspermia? (Score:4, Interesting)
Surely it only takes one tiny droplet of life-carrying comet water to make it into earth's early oceans without being boiled into sterility. If conditions were right, that initial small pocket of bacteria or virii could multiply to cover the planet in a matter of years.
You can't tell me that over millions of years and millions of impacts, not one would come down at a sufficiently low speed or favorable grazing angle to gently melt comet ice into an existing ocean.
Given what we've observed of Mars meteorites ending up on Earth, it's perfectly possible for life from one part of the universe to spread from planet to planet - and even solar system to solar system.
If you buy into the idea that there was life elsewhere in the universe long before life has been found to have existed on Earth - then panspermia is very possible.
My problem with that theory is that it doesn't answer any questions about how life formed in the first place. There still has to be an origin world - and explaining how life appeared there is just as hard as explaining how it might have formed here in the absence of panspermia.
Re:So why does this contradict panspermia? (Score:5, Insightful)
Yes, but, as you point out, the Problem with the Idea of Panspermia is that it does not explain how life arose -- it just shifts the blame for it (as it were) elsewhere.
Re:So why does this contradict panspermia? (Score:2)
Today I'm feeling Whimsical.
Well, it probably wasn't something that happened in liquid water, as the reactions of the sort that create proteins -- turning monomers into polymers -- are not energetically favorable in a l
Re:So why does this contradict panspermia? (Score:2)
My point is is that Panspermia is often used to avoid that question entirely.
Re:So why does this contradict panspermia? (Score:2)
Yes, but where life first arose is not nearly as important a question as how it arose in the first place, unless you're trying to understand how.
Re:So why does this contradict panspermia? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:So why does this contradict panspermia? (Score:5, Interesting)
Of course, it might be out of order, and one would have to know that the time this would take would be immense.
For those who make the chance argument, stateing that such complex structures canot possibly arise by chance i say:
Look at the size of the universe, there must be at least 125 billion galaxies, each with roughly 100 billion stars, each with the possibility of terrestrial planetoids, each with a massive surface area with plenty or energy and materials for the possibility of forming the molecular strutuces by chance that are a prelude to life. Then take that number, and times it by the age of most galaxies.....All of a sudden the chance doesnt seem so small.
As for complexities, whos to say life is complex, its equally possible that life is mearly countless basic systems working symbiotically for the goal of survival and reproduction. I give the cargo cult as ana example: In World War 2 several tribes worshiped American cargo planes because the ability and complexities of human flight were so vast to them that the cargo planes could only be explained as items of a supernatural nature. It never appeared to them that these planes were not godly and no complex beyond their understanding, such is a cargo plane simply a number of systems discovered by humans by chance working in parrallel.
As for thurther complexity: If life is so complex that the possibility of chance is so small, then how does one explain oru manipulation of life, for example insulin producing bacteria, or the mapping of the genome. How does one explain the evolution and appearance of new viruses and bacterial strains by chance.
Life is beautiful, it is wonderous and magestic, but it is not beyond our understanding. It arose by chance, it's growth is determined by evolution and it is not complex. It just appears that way to some.
I always think, that maybe the reason ID and creationalists fight progress and science is they think that discovery is taking the magic and beauty away from life. But instead, what they dont realise, is that all it is doing it discovering more beautiful and wonderous details. We are not finding answers, only more questions. We are giving power to ourselves and whatever purpose we serve. There is no need to be afraid, no need to be ignorant, only a need to be open to the wonders that surround us and fuel the need for discovery that comes with conscienceness.
Re:So why does this contradict panspermia? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:So why does this contradict panspermia? (Score:2, Insightful)
Life will find a way, and given the scope of the universe, even if
Re:So why does this contradict panspermia? (Score:2)
That's maybe 25,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 planets.
Re:So why does this contradict panspermia? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:So why does this contradict panspermia? (Score:2)
Did it never occur to you that perhaps we don't use the proteins we use because they are the only molecute capable of the job, bu merely because they are the ones that were at hand?
Don't be so damn arrogant and idiotic assuming that what you see is all that is possible.
There are countless billions of potential protein arrangements that could help life arise - we just happ
Re:So why does this contradict panspermia? (Score:2)
These requirements are a myth. Even with the assumption that life requires liquid water, the idea liquid water only exists within a 'Goldilocks' or 'just right' zone based
Re:So why does this contradict panspermia? (Score:2, Insightful)
Obviously the percentage chance of life forming in the universe cant be 0%, our own existance proves that. Given the enormity of the universe, and the incomprehensibly long periods of time given (the big bang is theorized to be almost 14 Billion years ago), even something that has only a 0.000000000000000000000001% chance becomes almost a certainty.
It only really becomes amazing when you get into intelligent life forming, given that you must have
Re:So why does this contradict panspermia? (Score:3, Insightful)
If the chances are one in a hundred trillion trillion trillion, and you have 9 hundred trillion trillion trillion trials, it can be expected to happen nine times.
Essentially impossible is just a way for people to discount the improbable, because realistically, it's either impossible or not. There isn't any middle ground.
Re:So why does this contradict panspermia? (Score:4, Informative)
I do not disagree completely, but one word is definitely wrong in this sentence. Virii.
A virus is a parasitic lifeform, that "lives" only inside of a living cell. No cell - no life, no multiplication, no evolution and no spreadnig. Outside of a living cell a virus is an inactive lump of protein and nucleic acid.
Other tahn that, a virus is a potent driver of evolution by mixing up its host genome, possibly creating new genetic structures.
Re:So why does this contradict panspermia? (Score:2)
Well, panspermia theory is a bit like ID .. (Score:3, Interesting)
Examples:
- the cosmos helped life come into existance by simple organic molecules that were
- formed in space
- ejected from a planet
- life spread through our solar system, that is:
- from mars
- the asteroid belt was formely a planet hosting life which
- DNA/RNA ca
Re:So why does this contradict panspermia? (Score:2)
It doesn't. According to TFA:
10% of Earth's water is a FUCK of a lot of water (137 million km3); and in that you only need one living cell to colonise the whole planet in a very short time geologically. It
Re:So why does this contradict panspermia? (Score:2)
Whos to say that the universe isnt infinite in age, and life always was here, (15b age is a theory, what if we just cant see past 15b LY)
Re:So why does this contradict panspermia? (Score:2)
Besides, I though it was proven that amino acids can survive impact, along with leptides. Someone should run that same test with spores and single cell life.
Re:So why does this contradict panspermia? (Score:2)
Comment removed (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:We have three different non-competing models he (Score:4, Insightful)
I mean, vaporizing something like a person would pretty much destroy them, but it doesn't do much to eliminate individual atoms, it just moves them around. So the ocean itself might be turned into water vapor, but then where does that all go?
I'm sure a big enough impact could blow matter up into space, where it'll float away never to bother the busy earth again, but I would think that most matter gets propelled outwards from an impact, not up. So wouldn't a meteor hitting an ocean just spread the water around?
Re:We have three different non-competing models he (Score:2)
comet impacts
Re:We have three different non-competing models he (Score:2)
Then it comes down as rain.
I don't see any problem with the theory that "organic matter" came to primative earth from comets, mixed with water, which was vaporized, then condensed, then that "organic matter" became the building blocks for life.
But at that stage of earth's life, there's little distinction between a comet and earth. They're both big hunks of rock and ice floating in space. I'm sure some "organic matter" originated on earth too. What they're saying
Re:We have three different non-competing models he (Score:2)
Bingo. We'll just have to observe that primordial planetary system, won't we? Just because a theory is difficult to observe currently (as opposed to invoking supernatural stuff), doesn't mean we shouldn't consider them.
Re:We have three different non-competing models he (Score:2)
All right, you tried this once, and I let it go. I had to call you on it the second time however.
The Depp Impact mission suggested just the opposite of what you say, that there was very little ice in that particular comet.
I don't know how you drew your conclusions, but they are incorrect.
Why its not turtles all the way down (Score:5, Interesting)
If we are to assess the probability that life is exogenous or endogenous to Earth, we must ask about the relative probability of: a) life forming on a planetary body versus b) life forming on a planetary body which then survives being blasted into space, travelling interstellar distances, happening to collide with another forming planet of just the right composition (without ever venturing too close to some hot star), and surviving that collision.
Even if the probability of life arising on a planet very very low, the relative probability of endogenous versus exogenous origin is very skewed toward endogenous origin. Because exogenous origin requires both endogenous origin (somewhere else) and then a low probability trip between planets, exogenous origin would seem to be very unlikely unless there are large numbers of planets with endogenous life that spew lots of interstellar-traversing chunks. But if there are large numbers of planets with with their own endogenous life, then the probability of life forming on Earth endogenously must also be high and trump the low likelihood of life just happening to make it from somewhere else.
Re:Why its not turtles all the way down (Score:3, Interesting)
You might argue (although I personally would not) that the probability of life spontaneously arising on a world with the precise parameters of early earth is Pe - but the probability of it arising on a planet with different parameters of atmosphere, composition, temperature, gravity, radiation - is larger than Pe. Call this probability Px (probability of life forming on pla
Re:Why its not turtles all the way down (Score:2)
Re:Why its not turtles all the way down (Score:3, Insightful)
That's a very interesting argument. I would suspect, however, that Z is such a small number as to swamp all the other terms. A panspermic chunk must gain enough velocity to escape the gravity well of its planet AND star yet not have so much velocity that it doesn't get captured by
Re:Why its not turtles all the way down (Score:2)
Re:Why its not turtles all the way down (Score:2)
I'm not seeing the point of your post. Earth life may have originated elsewhere or not. Are we supposed to ignore theories that are difficult to observe (rather than impossible like some
Science never stops moving (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Science never stops moving (Score:2)
Re:Science never stops moving (Score:2)
Did they? When? I haven't noticed. Funny, but I assumed that the benefit of the scientific approach was that ideas are very definitely NOT cast in stone, unlike the dogma of Intelligent Design, which states that some things are just too complex to have ever evolved.
Science never stops moving? (Score:4, Insightful)
A good case in point is evolution, where if you don't mention it in a glowing light on
Re:Science never stops moving? (Score:2)
Re:Science never stops moving? (Score:2)
There are people who would want to believe that human beings are *not* animals, and how dare you suggest that we evolved from them?
There are people who would want to believe that everything was created by the gods in one fantastical story or another.
And then there are people who want to understand. They argue amongst themselves endlessly, while the other t
Re:Science never stops moving? (Score:3, Insightful)
Such as?
Sure, right now it's the best idea going, but that doesn't mean it's the end of the conversation. Yet questioning it all usually does end the conversation.
I would be interested to know exactly what about evolution you would like to question? That organisms have changed over time? That such changes happen naturally? That the changes result in variety, and from that variety some organisms turn out to be better able to repro
Origin of life and fear (Score:2)
UA Professor Emeritus Robert Strom believes that no more than 10 percent of the Earth's water comes from comets and any oceans then extant would have been 'vaporized by the asteroid impacts during the cataclysm.'
Uhuh, so that one that did get through can use the excuse "wha? criminey, Tara was still virgin, its not supposed to happen the first time!"
Re:Origin of life and fear (Score:2)
Cripes, now I have to RTFA.
Life (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Life (Score:3, Funny)
Sorry Guys... (Score:2)
this is a religion vs science toll (Score:3, Interesting)
Those inclined to believe the Bible and feel skeptical when science apparently contradicts it, should take comfort in the fact that science's story has changed over the century whereas (relatively) the Bible's has not.
This is does not mean that religion ought to ignore and deprecate science. Things like that Galileo business provide powerful insights into how to interpret scripture. If the Bible says "sunrise" it should be interpreted phenomenologically. That is as an observation of brute phenomena and one should not take that as an explanation of the mechanism that gave rise to the phenomena. (Incidentally, the weatherman is not a flat-earther because he tells us sunrise/sunset times.)
With this phenomenological principle in mind, someone who believes in the Bible will be able to interpret its statements about God according to that same phenomenological principle. Troubling verses about God "doing evil" are thus explained. To wit, God establishes things like gravity and hydrodynamics that move in predictable patterns. When those patterns conspire to crush us, via tsunami or hurricane, we perceive evil fom God's hand.
But the character behind these phenomena is more reflective of the scientific principles of natural law.
I suppose I should ask for an offering at this point. Instead, I'll ask that we all work a little harder at our science so we can better predict natural forces and prepare for them.
Re:this is a religion vs science toll (Score:2)
As the old saying goes: "Science may be wrong today, tomorrow or ten years from now, but the Bible is wrong forever."
Contradictions abound! (Score:3, Informative)
Due to gravitational interactions between the gas planets and the kuiper belt objects, Jupiter's orbit shrinks and Saturn, Uranus and Neptune expand, with the latter two actually changing place and moving into much more elliptical orbits before settling down into their current orbits. These larger orbits put both planets squarely into the primordial kuiper belt and, well, cause the Late Heavy Bombardment.
Nova (Score:2)
Using Nova as an educational tool, you are likely to learn about theories that are already proven false or have little evidence backing them up. The documentaries are certainly twisted into a certain point of view and convey information that the scientists they interview wouldn't have agreed with. Especially on topics related to Geology.
I'd say the same thing about most of the Discovery Channel's content, given the experiences of some sci
no, it doesn't (Score:2)
It seems that what that article is talking about is not panspermia, but the composition of the atmosphere and how that was determined by impacts.
Re:Why (Score:5, Insightful)
> than to assume that life started here on Earth?
Two reasons:
1) We have some idea of the early conditions on Earth - but maybe
we have a hard time believing that those were conducive to
forming life from scratch. If life started elsewhere then there
is almost no limit to the range of concievable temperatures, pressures,
gravity, radiation and chemical environments in which it might
ultimately have formed.
2) Time: Is the Earth old enough for that very early phase of going
from completely non-biological materials to DNA, cell walls, etc?
If not - then panspermia explains that by saying that life was
around in some other place LONG before the Earth was formed.
So panspermia allows for a scientific explanation of life's formation
that is perhaps more plausible than formation on early Earth.
Re:Why (Score:3, Insightful)
that is perhaps more plausible than formation on early Earth.
Scientific? Sounds to me like you have a untestable theory for the origins of life. You can test components of the theory, but ultimately you always be able to say... well sure it came from somewhere else, but it's been millions/billions of years and all of the concrete evidence has been washed away.
Re:Why (Score:2)
Re:Why (Score:2)
Re:Why (Score:2)
Re:Why (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Why (Score:2)
Re:Why (Score:3, Insightful)
If we find a perfectly good explanation for the origins of life on Earth - then that is still not proof that life actually did start here.
That means that Panspermia is unfalsifyable - which is a bad thing for a scientific theory. All you can do is to presume that it's false until someone proves otherwise.
But the previous post questioned why Panspermia could possibly be of any help in explaining t
Re:Why (Score:2)
The earliest evidence for life [brookes.ac.uk] is 3.8 billion years ago. The time the earth cooled to form solid mantle is about 4.0 billions years ago. (Or to go further back the earth formed about 4.3-4.5 billion years ago.) Was about 200 million years enough time for simple life, which is really not very simple, to evolve and then survive during the meteorite bombardment that was happening then?
I think this is a big problem for the current theory. Panspermia pushes this problem off earth and gives the possibili
Re:Why (Score:2)
Funny, you can mix oxygen and hydrogen, add a bit of heat and BAM! water. Funny how all of those atoms arranged themselves into H2O molecules. That can't be though - all we did was shake, heat, and mix. From your computer parts analogy we have solid proof that water can never form!
Oh and those experiments in test tubes - call be back after
Re:Heh. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Heh. (Score:2, Interesting)
The best place to form and spread from may not necessarily be the best place to grow up. Maybe life on Earth originated in Jupiter's atmosphere or moons, for example, and then spread to Earth. Earth may be a better place to g
Re:Heh. (Score:2)
The theory of reverse Copernicus? Since we are not the center of the universe, nothing can happen here. I know where you're coming from. Too many ideas have been wrong who's only merit was that it made us seem more special. But, here panspermia has no merit and the other idea is quite plausible.
I don't see abiogensis showing that life is really r
Re:Heh. (Score:2)
You are making things more complex needlessly. You might as well ask that I accept panspermia on faith. With no evidence you are adding like two steps to the process. Life developing elsewhere, surviving two impact events (count them one to knock them off Genesis world and another to land here), and ending up here. To counteract the typical theory that only involves 'life developing here', whi
Re:Occam's Razor (Score:2)
Re:Panspermia vs. GOD vs. Evolution vs. Creationis (Score:4, Insightful)
Many of the plaintiffs in lawsuits against idiotic creationist "equal time" laws have been religious figures. Do not make the assumption that all religious people buy into the creationist agenda.
Re:Futile work (Score:2, Interesting)
What does "realise he needs it" have to do with anything? Evolution is not intentional, evolution is not a "force". Nothing decides to evolve. A species ability to visually perceive offers many advantages, depending on the environment
Re:Futile work (Score:2)
If GOD was so great, he would leave us a real monolith with a truly hardcover bible.
Why is GOD hiding and being mysterious, because hes not here thats why.
Re:Futile work (Score:2)
Darwin himself deals with this in "The Origin of Species". There are many steps from the basic light/dark sensing that some bacteria have to the fully developed vertebrate eye. Every step gives an evolutionary advantage in some circum
Re:Everyone knows well enough (Score:2)
Re:misleading summary (Score:2)
Yes, and I may have had sex with a woman.
Re:misleading summary (Score:2)
Consensual sex. Without money involved.
Re:Life (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:How about an old study! The BIBLE! (Score:2, Interesting)
Do you believe God made the Universe, Heaven, Earth, and everything in it?
I do.
Science is the word we use to describe our research trying to find God through evidence of his Creation.
You think Man authored the Laws of Physics which scientists hold so dear? Think again. No man set Avagadro's constant, or any of the other parameters of our observable universe.
If God did create us, did he intend us to try to find Him, or mull around like a bunch of obedient ignorant sheep doing the bid