Constraining the Time Interval for the Origin of Life on Earth
Ben K. D. Pearce, Andrew S. Tupper, Ralph E. Pudritz, Paul G. Higgs

TL;DR
This paper reviews multidisciplinary evidence to estimate the time window for the origin of life on Earth, suggesting life emerged between 4.5 and 3.7 billion years ago, with a possible emergence period of 200 to 800 million years.
Contribution
It synthesizes geological, astrophysical, and biological data to constrain the timing of life's origin and clarifies the uncertainties involved.
Findings
Habitability boundary could be as early as 4.5 Ga
Biosignature boundary around 3.7 Ga
Life emerged within 200 to 800 million years after habitability
Abstract
Estimates of the time at which life arose on Earth make use of two types of evidence. First, astrophysical and geophysical studies provide a timescale for the formation of Earth and the Moon, for large impact events on early Earth, and for the cooling of the early magma ocean. From this evidence, we can deduce a habitability boundary, which is the earliest point at which Earth became habitable. Second, biosignatures in geological samples, including microfossils, stromatolites, and chemical isotope ratios, provide evidence for when life was actually present. From these observations we can deduce a biosignature boundary, which is the earliest point at which there is clear evidence that life existed. Studies with molecular phylogenetics and records of the changing level of oxygen in the atmosphere give additional information that helps to determine the biosignature boundary. Here, we…
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