Tuesday, November 07, 2006

'Scuse me, while I eat the sky'.

'Haze' could also be the term to describe the air in Houston. It's like living in a polluted sauna, to this Coloradoan.

Study: Early organisms dined on haze


CU researchers say Earth's atmosphere may have rained food down on the young planet's developing life.

Food for Earth's earliest inhabitants may have fallen from thin air, according to Colorado researchers.

A team of scientists from the University of Colorado and NASA mixed methane and carbon dioxide - two chemicals believed to be present in Earth's atmosphere a few billion years ago - and spiced the brew with a whiff of radiation from an ultraviolet light bulb.

The product: a haze of energy-rich organic chemicals that could have rained down on primeval organisms growing on the Earth's surface.

Previously, scientists suspected Earth's early life was concentrated in extreme environments, such as hydrothermal vents, because only there would there have been plenty of energy and nutrition.

"If our mechanism is correct, we have a global source of food that's slowly settling down everywhere," said Margaret Tolbert, a scientist with CU's Cooperative Institute for Research in Atmospheric Sciences.

Tolbert and her colleagues from CU and the NASA Ames Research Center in Moffett Field, Calif., published their findings Monday in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.


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