Darwin's Natural Selection

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How Many Primoridal Soups

The conditions required for a primoridal soup to exist are special. A typical puddle of water does not qualify. Thaxton defined the conditions as follows: 1) the atmosphere above the puddle needs to contain no oxygen. 2) The puddle must be shielded from UV rays 3) it must have a way to continually evaporate and replenish its chemicals. 4) It must not contain a high concentration of salt (this rules out sea water) and finally 4) It needs to be near an energy source.8

So now assume that every star has ten planets and that each of these planets has 1,000 primordial soups. Thus, at any given time the universe has 7 x 1026 primorial soups. As some of these are destroyed, others replace them. Assume that every soup produces organic polymers (chains of amino acids, RNA bases, +other chemicals) at a rate of 1,000 Kg a year, and that 0.1% of the polymers produced are long enough to have some function (for example, 50 RNA bases strung together to form a chain counts, 3 does not, because 3 RNA bases cannot perform the function of a ribozyme, whereas 50 bases might be a ribozyme). This leads to the production of 1 Kg of suitable polymers per year per soup. If the average polymer weight is comparable to 30 amino acids, then each soup will produce 2 x 1023 organic polymers of reasonable size per year.

     Each year all of the soups combined will produce 1.4 x 1050 polymers. Over the history of the universe (15 billion years), this equates to 2.1 x 1060 polymers. Clearly, this helps chemical evolution. Each polymer created is a try, so the techniques used earlier in this chapter can now be applied to chemical evolution. The goal is to figure out if a self replicating molecule can ever evolve given that the universe is quite big and has been around for a long time. The other goal is to figure out if an enzyme like G3PD can evolve.

     Also realize that we cannot rely on natural selection to offset the poor odds until useful information is created. So all of these calculations depend on chance with no help from selection.


Next: RNA Self Replication

Previous: How Many Stars

Navigation Menu Chapter 15

Chapter 15: The Effect of Time on Evolution
        How Does Time Factor Into the Equation
        How Fast do the tries accumulate?

        How many stars in the universe?
        How many primordial soups in the universe?
        RNA self replication
        Protein Evolution
        Upper Limit in the Number of Tries

        Constraints on the First Self Replicating Molecule
        Natural selection Limits the Number of Tries
        This Simple Example Shows that Evolution Does not Work Like Darwin Imagined
        Natural Selection Reduces the Number of Tries
        Implications for the self Replicating Molecule

PDF: Natural Selection, Evolution and Time  (264 Kb)

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