Bremen 2000 – wissenschaftliches Programm
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EP: Extraterrestrische Physik
EP 14: Leben und Lebensbedingungen ausserhalb der Erde II
EP 14.11: Vortrag
Mittwoch, 22. März 2000, 18:15–18:30, N3110
Igneous Rocks as a Source of Biochemically Relevant Organic Molecules and of Hydrogen — •Friedemann Freund, Alka Gupta, and Michele Cash — NASA Ames Research Center, MS 239-4, Moffett Field, CA 94035-1000, USA
The search for the origins of Life becomes more and more bewildering. How it all started over 3.5 Gyrs ago still evades comprehension, and how microbial communities can thrive today kilometers below the surface of the Earth also remains enigmatic. Rocks may have played an important role, both in the orgin of Life and its sustenance. Undisputedly, when rocks solidify in H2O/CO/CO2/N2-laden environments, their common silicate minerals form dilute solid solutions with gas/fluid components. H2O is known to form hydroxy anions, O3X-OH (X = Si4+,Al3+), but hydroxy pairs, O3X-OH HO-XO3, undergo a unique in situ redox conversion: they convert to H2 plus peroxy, O3X-OO-XO3. While the peroxy is tied into the structure, the H2 is diffusively mobile. Solute CO2 and solute N2 appear to undergo the same type of redox conversion, forming reduced carboxy anions (such as formiate) and reduced nitroxy anions, respectively, plus peroxy. Next, as the rocks cool as part of their geological cycle, the low-z elements H, C and N segregate and precipitate at dislocations and other major defects. There they form moieties of the general form [CxHyOzNw]n−. Upon weathering, these moieties turn into complex organic molecules. Additionally, the H2 represents a potentially large source of gaseous hydrogen in crustal rocks today that could provide an energy source for deep microbial communities.