In this video, we're going to be talking about something pretty interesting: how life first began on Earth. ABO Genesis is the natural process of the origin of life on Earth. It describes how life first formed from nonliving simple molecules. The theory suggests that life originated in the oceans of Earth about 3,800,000,000 years ago, and this is billion with a b. So we're talking about an incredibly long time ago. The theory suggests that life arose from non-biological elements, and these prebiotics were in high abundance on early Earth and include molecules such as hydrogen gas, water, ammonia, carbon dioxide, and methane. The question is, how did these prebiotics or these non-biological molecules convert into the very first biomolecules?
There are a few different theories. The atmospheric conversion theory suggests that the sun and lightning converted the prebiotics into the first simple biomolecules. The hydrothermal vents theory suggests that the first biomolecules were formed in areas where the sunlight and lightning could not penetrate and that the vents on the ocean floors were the ones to provide the energy to convert the prebiotics into the first biomolecule monomers. Let's take a look at our example to clear this up. In this example of the biomolecule monomer formation, on the left over here, what we have are the prebiotic materials or the non-biological materials.
The first theory suggests that solar radiation and lightning provided the energy to spark the prebiotics to convert into the first biomolecule monomers. The second theory, again, suggests that the first biomolecule monomers formed in areas where the sunlight and lightning could not penetrate and that hydrothermal vents provided the energy to convert the first prebiotic materials into the first biomolecule monomers. These are two competing theories that both have a lot of supporting experimental evidence. Over here, we have a biomolecule monomer, and the example that's being shown is an amino acid. We may never know which of these two theories is correct, but we do know that biomolecule monomers were formed.
In the next video, we're going to talk about how the first biomolecule polymers formed. So I'll see you guys in that video.