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Oh I just found the answer. Now I remember.Seriously?
Question regarding this explanation.Oh I just found the answer. Now I remember.
There's no fossilized evidence of abiogenesis because the process of life arising from non-living matter likely occurred at a molecular level, creating extremely small and fragile structures that wouldn't fossilize well, and happened so long ago that geological processes have largely erased any potential traces in the oldest rocks on Earth; essentially, the first life forms were too small and simple to leave behind recognizable fossils.
When abiogenesis first occurred and life arose from non living matter there is no record. Why not?
Doesn't lack of hard evidence make any theory softer? And does being make softer often result in defaulting to being dogmatic, to compensate? Why is this current theory treated as dogma, while being soft on original claim evidence? This does not add up to the philosophy of science, but rather some form of political-religious dual standard.Oh I just found the answer. Now I remember.
There's no fossilized evidence of abiogenesis because the process of life arising from non-living matter likely occurred at a molecular level, creating extremely small and fragile structures that wouldn't fossilize well, and happened so long ago that geological processes have largely erased any potential traces in the oldest rocks on Earth; essentially, the first life forms were too small and simple to leave behind recognizable fossils.
No, but since oxygen was likely a waste product of early life we can find signs of it in the sediments that were deposited. For example iron has more than one state of oxidation for the ions that it makes. Naturally you will see +2 where the atoms have lost two electrons. This is the form of oxidation that occurs without oxygen. Just to clarify things a bit for chemicals oxidation is just an act of an atom losing an electron or electrons. It got that name because oxygen strips electrons away from metals quite easily. So any loss of electrons is called oxidation. If oxygen is present iron will lose another electron and become Fe +3. And here is the important part. Fe +2 is soluble in water. Fe +3 is not. The oceans used to have a lot of Fe +2 in it. As oxygen was produced it further oxidized the iron and it came out of solution. That formed what became beds of iron ore Those deposits are called "red beds" due to the iron oxide or rust that gives them a reddish hue. We first see red beds at 2.3 billion years ago, but there are signs of it even before that.Question regarding this explanation.
Since they were too small and fragile one would think that there would be some sort of fossilized record if many of them were fossilized together no?
That brings up an interesting point. Would all of the first lifeforms have been drawn to each other or no?
Do you know if there any scientific papers or research on the questions that I asked?No, but since oxygen was likely a waste product of early life we can find signs of it in the sediments that were deposited. For example iron has more than one state of oxidation for the ions that it makes. Naturally you will see +2 where the atoms have lost two electrons. This is the form of oxidation that occurs without oxygen. Just to clarify things a bit for chemicals oxidation is just an act of an atom losing an electron or electrons. It got that name because oxygen strips electrons away from metals quite easily. So any loss of electrons is called oxidation. If oxygen is present iron will lose another electron and become Fe +3. And here is the important part. Fe +2 is soluble in water. Fe +3 is not. The oceans used to have a lot of Fe +2 in it. As oxygen was produced it further oxidized the iron and it came out of solution. That formed what became beds of iron ore Those deposits are called "red beds" due to the iron oxide or rust that gives them a reddish hue. We first see red beds at 2.3 billion years ago, but there are signs of it even before that.
Doesn't lack of hard evidence make any theory softer? And does being make softer often result in defaulting to being dogmatic, to compensate? Why is this current theory treated as dogma, while being soft on original claim evidence? This does not add up to the philosophy of science, but rather some form of political-religious dual standard.
On the other hand, even if we cannot show direct evidence, if a theory is sound enough, it should offer us a way to simulate this needed evidence in a lab. But that current theory fails there also, meaning the current theory has even deeper conceptual flaws.
This is not a question of Creationism verses Evolution, but a flawed Evolutionary theory that needs a major science update
Why are you asking purely scientific questions on a religious forum when there are plenty of science forums out there that would be much better sources for answers (assuming you want the real answers)?When abiogenesis first occurred and life arose from non living matter there is no record. Why not?
See post #8. I am concerned as to how you accept scientific research and discoveries in general for evolution and abiogenesis, and more specificaly how the fossil and related evidence concerning early life and abiogenesis.Do you know if there any scientific papers or research on the questions that I asked?
This is not strictly a religious form only. In fact questions concerning science alone, science and religious issues, and religious issues only are part of the basic foundation of this forum.Why are you asking purely scientific questions on a religious forum when there are plenty of science forums out there that would be much better sources for answers (assuming you want the real answers)?
I was just wondering if there was any discoveries found about the questions that I asked in post #5 or if they are looking for such evidence.See post #8. I am concerned as to how you accept scientific research and discoveries in general for evolution and abiogenesis, and more specificaly how the fossil and related evidence concerning early life and abiogenesis.
Note: Evolution and abiogenesis is considered environment driven. The evidence indicates life first formed in and around the hydrothermal vents associated with continental spreading zones after they began to form when Continental Drift and early oceans formed with an environment suitable for abiogenesis and early life to evolve.
Abiogenesis is neither a theory nor dogma. It's a tentative hypothesis.Why is this current theory treated as dogma
The conceptual flaw is yours in thinking that nature ought to give you what you demand of it. Scientists are constrained to work with the evidence they have, not the evidence that you or they would prefer to have.On the other hand, even if we cannot show direct evidence, if a theory is sound enough, it should offer us a way to simulate this needed evidence in a lab. But that current theory fails there also, meaning the current theory has even deeper conceptual flaws.
Science has determined that water (hydrogen and oxygen) plays a key role in abiogenesis and life. And carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus, and sulfur. And an energy source like the sun or a hydrothermal vent.Water has all the tricks needed to be central to a genuine model for life.
Again see post #8I was just wondering if there was any discoveries found about the questions that I asked in post #5 or if they are looking for such evidence.
That post has nothing to do with my questions in post #5Again see post #8