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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
41 w

Spider Bite Update
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prepping.com

Spider Bite Update

Spider Bite Update #alabamaprepper #survival #substantial
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Survival Prepper
Survival Prepper  
41 w

How To Spend $1000 As A BEGINNER PREPPER
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prepping.com

How To Spend $1000 As A BEGINNER PREPPER

How To Spend $1000 As a New Prepper #prepper #prepping #survival #emergencypreparedness #preppers Some of the links below are Affiliate Links which Earn Commission: Links for my Socials, Affiliates and Products https://beacons.ai/shahzadkayani Email: shahzadmkayani@gmail.com
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Science Explorer
Science Explorer
41 w

Lessons From Ancient Earth’s Atmosphere: From Hostile to Hospitable
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www.universetoday.com

Lessons From Ancient Earth’s Atmosphere: From Hostile to Hospitable

Will we ever understand how life got started on Earth? We’ve learned much about Earth’s long, multi-billion-year history, but a detailed understanding of how the planet’s atmospheric chemistry evolved still eludes us. At one time, Earth was atmospherically hostile, and its transition from that state to a planet teeming with life followed a complex path. What made Earth so special? Research shows that while Earth is completely different from its neighbouring planets now, in the past, it shared many atmospheric characteristics with modern-day Venus and Mars. How did Earth turn out so different? A better understanding of Earth’s atmospheric journey can help us understand some of the distant exoplanets we’ve detected. In the near future, new telescopes will be revealing more details of exoplanet atmospheres. Many puzzles await, and some of the solutions to understanding them could be found on ancient Earth. Ancient Earth had a reducing atmosphere, which means that there was a lack of free oxygen. The atmosphere contained reducing gases like hydrogen and methane. These gases quickly react with oxygen and remove it from the atmosphere. Some of those same molecules also react with UV light, and the chemical reactions produce organic molecules. While that’s a general outline of some aspects of ancient Earth’s atmosphere, there’s a lot of detail that needs to be constrained before a clearer picture emerges of Earth’s transformation. Researchers at Tohoku University, the University of Tokyo, and Hokkaido University have developed a new model of atmospheric chemical reactions that sheds light on how Earth’s atmosphere evolved and how the first life may have arisen. The research is “Self-Shielding Enhanced Organics Synthesis in an Early Reduced Earth’s Atmosphere.” It’s published in the journal Astrobiology, and Tatsuya Yoshida from Tohoku University is the lead author. Before life could appear, Earth needed a good supply of important prebiotic molecules like formaldehyde (H2CO) and poisonous hydrogen cyanide (HCN). These molecules are critical because they can undergo a wide variety of reactions to produce the more complex molecules life requires. They produce amino acids, sugars, and nucleobases, which are the building blocks for DNA and RNA. Research shows that a highly reduced atmosphere like ancient Earth’s is a candidate for producing these important prebiotic molecules, especially if it’s above a primordial ocean. Earth’s primordial ocean, or proto-ocean, was also much different from the modern ocean. Among other things, it was acidic because of volcanic gases. It was also hot. Ancient Earth had hot, acidic oceans and a reducing atmosphere that lacked free oxygen. Image Credit: NASA/T.Pyle “Ancient Earth was nothing like our current home,” explains co-author Shungo Koyama, also from Tohoku University. “It was a much more hostile place; rich in metallic iron with an atmosphere containing hydrogen and methane.” The Sun’s UV radiation bombarded ancient Earth unimpeded by an ozone layer, driving chemical reactions in the ancient Earth’s atmosphere, oceans, and crust. That much is understood. But what scientists desire is a better understanding of all of the details. “However, the branching ratio between organic matter formation and oxidation remains unknown despite its significance on the abiotic chemical evolution of early Earth,” the authors explain. The researchers developed a photochemical model for a reduced Earth’s atmosphere primarily containing H2 and CH4. Their model is based on one that’s been successfully applied to Jupiter’s atmosphere, the atmospheres of ancient and modern Mars, and runaway greenhouse atmospheres. The model considers 342 separate chemical reactions and also includes atmospheric hydrogen escape and atmospheric mixing. The young Sun emitted more intense UV radiation than the modern Sun. The UV broke water molecules down into hydrogen and oxygen radicals. Radicals have one unpaired electron, which makes them chemically reactive. Much of the hydrogen escaped to space, while the oxygen did not. Illustration of what the Sun may have been like 4 billion years ago. Scientists think that overall, the young Sun was fainter than it is now. But it was also more active and had a higher level of magnetic activity. That activity made the Sun emit more UV than it does now. Credit: NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center/Conceptual Image Lab The oxygen radicals combined with methane led to the creation of organic molecules like HCN and H2CO. Hydrocarbons, such as acetylene (C2H2) and methylacetylene (C3H4), were also present in the atmosphere. These chemicals absorbed some UV, shielding the lower atmosphere from photodissociation. “According to our results, UV absorptions by gaseous hydrocarbons such as C2H2 and C3H4 significantly suppress the H2O photolysis and following CH4 oxidation,” the authors explain. The atmospheric methane helped drive the production of organics. That allowed organic molecules to accumulate into a prebiotic soup, which could’ve provided the building blocks for life. “Accordingly, nearly half of initial CH4 possibly becomes converted to heavier organics along with deposition of prebiotically essential molecules such as HCN and H2CO on the surface of a primordial ocean for a geological timescale order of 10-100 Myr,” the authors write. This diagram shows the evolution of Earth’s ancient atmosphere estimated by this study. Earth initially had a reducing atmosphere with lots of H2 and some CH4. Intense UV energy from the Sun split water into hydrogen and oxygen radicals, with much of the hydrogen escaping into space. CH4 that remains in the atmosphere is converted into organics. Earth loses its ancient CH4 and H2-rich atmosphere, the CH4 decomposes, and a layer of organics several hundred meters thick accumulates. Image Credit: Yoshida et al. 2024 As time went on and the reduced atmosphere evolved, H2CO and HCN were continuously synthesized and accumulated in the ocean. H2CO and HCN are considered to be critical in prebiotic chemistry. According to these results, Earth’s early atmosphere was a major source of these important prebiotic molecules. They didn’t need to come from meteorites or comets. The authors calculate that a layer of organic several hundred meters thick may have covered the ocean. “The continuous supply of these prebiotically important molecules could potentially lead to the synthesis of amino acids, nucleobases, sugars, and their polymers,” the researchers write. “There may have been an accumulation of organics that created what was like an enriched soup of important building blocks. That could have been the source from which living things first emerged on Earth,” said lead author Yoshida. The model shows that Earth’s early atmosphere was eerily similar to modern-day Mars and Venus. However, Earth evolved into a completely different world. How? This research doesn’t explain it all. But it does deepen our understanding of the evolutionary track Earth followed. The question becomes, is Earth unique? Or is it a common path that exoplanets in other Solar Systems can follow? The post Lessons From Ancient Earth’s Atmosphere: From Hostile to Hospitable appeared first on Universe Today.
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Classic Rock Lovers
Classic Rock Lovers  
41 w

David Gilmour Is Already Thinking About His Next Album
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ultimateclassicrock.com

David Gilmour Is Already Thinking About His Next Album

In the first episode of "The UCR Podcast," the Pink Floyd legend takes stock of his musical career, past, present and future. Continue reading…
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INFOWARS
INFOWARS
41 w

House Republicans to Elect New Trump-era Leadership https://www.infowars.com/posts..../house-republicans-t

Attention Required! | Cloudflare
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www.infowars.com

Attention Required! | Cloudflare

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Conservative Voices
Conservative Voices
41 w

Trump Makes Major Personnel Announcements | Jack Smith and Special Counsel to Resign | 11.13.24
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www.rvmnews.com

Trump Makes Major Personnel Announcements | Jack Smith and Special Counsel to Resign | 11.13.24

Trump Makes Major Personnel Announcements | Jack Smith and Special Counsel to Resign | 11.13.24
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Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
Fun Facts And Interesting Bits
41 w

Horns Aplenty: The Ancient Greek Origins of the Cornucopia
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www.mentalfloss.com

Horns Aplenty: The Ancient Greek Origins of the Cornucopia

Here's how the cornucopia went from ancient gods to American dinner tables.
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Beyond Bizarre
Beyond Bizarre
41 w ·Youtube Wild & Crazy

YouTube
Creepypasta Horror Stories Radio- 24/7 - Scary stories to relax/study to
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AllSides - Balanced News
AllSides - Balanced News
41 w

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www.allsides.com

Make no mistake: this Trump presidency will continue to attack abortion rights

Abortion rights initiatives were on the ballot in 10 states on Tuesday, and won in seven of them. One of the losers was prop 4, Florida’s abortion rights measure, which received a whopping 57% of the vote but failed to meet the state’s unusually high 60% threshold, meaning that the state’s six-week ban will remain in place. Asked about the Florida abortion rights proposition ahead of the election, Trump said that when he went to cast his ballot near Palm Beach, he would vote against it.
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AllSides - Balanced News
AllSides - Balanced News
41 w

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www.allsides.com

Trump was right, voters want decisions about abortion to be made locally

Six months ago I wrote about how Donald Trump was supposedly in trouble on the issue of abortion. High-profile members of the pro-life community were threatening to abandon him. Consequently, Democrats were musing over the possibility of riding the abortion rights train to a White House-House-Senate trifecta.
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