Beastt said:
Since non-life can come from life, it seems completely natural to me that the inverse is also true. In fact, the name "abiogenesis" literally means life from non-life.
Seeming natural to you is one thing, but as you say so far, it is only an idea. Dead things come from living things, because death and decay exist. I don't see how that means living things must come from dead things.
...The goal of this research is to recreate an environment which could have existed naturally on a younger Earth ...
Could have existed is one way to put it. But think about it, did they have a team of top scientists, aiding and abbetting the mix in the tube, in this best of imagined conditions for making it happen back then? After many many years of working on this stuff, if they ever gwt it right, I find it amusing one would look at the result as an accident?
The simplest form of life could be as ordinary as a droplett of oil containing genetic matter.
Hopefully, we can stick it in a primordial pond, and have it at least crawl out?
.. Fatty acids are known to form naturally in nature and they are non-biological. These tiny dropletts which they refer to as "vesicles" will be the body of our biological creation.
Well put, creation!
.. It was found that when this clay existed in close proximity to the vesicles of fatty acids and some of the basic building blocks of genetic material called "nucleotides", that the clay acted as a catalyst to draw the nucleotides into the vesicle.
Granny had a clay fetish?
So all we need now is the ability for these vesicles to divide and for the genetic material they hold to replicate and we have something which might be classified as living.
Still, there seems to be more to it.
"Scientists have long been fascinated by how
living cells are able to replicate DNA
using building blocks floating randomly inside the cells nucleus. The interior of the nucleus is filled with a gel-like liquid known as nucleoplasm. The DNA building blocks, known as nucleotides, float around in this liquid like ingredients in a molecular soup. Also present in the nucleoplasm are proteins known as polymerases, which
pluck nucleotides from the soup as needed when copying DNA." Just sounds like it all is no accident to me.
http://www.livescience.com/technology/050928_dna_robots.html
From there, evolution takes over and begins making changes to the genetic strands inside the vesicles and we're on our way.
Then we would need to chat about the time needed.
..if the solution they're in is sloshed around near a porous material such as pumice stone, the pumice can strain them, causing them to break up and therefore, replicated. Once split in two, they rely upon the natural catalystic nature of the clay to provide them with more nucleotide material.
Hmm, God made man of clay, coincidence? Later, some men got sloshed. We're close on this!