Nitrogen Oxide Concentrations in Natural Waters on Early Earth
Sukrit Ranjan, Zoe R. Todd, Paul B. Rimmer, Dimitar D. Sasselov,, Andrew R. Babbin

TL;DR
This study reevaluates the stability and concentrations of nitrogen oxide ions in early Earth's waters, revealing they were likely much lower than previously thought due to environmental degradation, impacting prebiotic chemistry models.
Contribution
It demonstrates that NO$_{X}^{-}$ ions were less stable in early Earth's reducing environment than prior models suggested, emphasizing the importance of environmental factors in prebiotic chemistry.
Findings
NO$_{X}^{-}$ concentrations likely below 1 μM in the ocean
Prebiotic ponds could sustain higher NO$_{X}^{-}$ levels
Most NO$_{X}^{-}$ on early Earth was probably NO$_{3}^{-}$
Abstract
A key challenge in origins-of-life studies is estimating the abundances of species relevant to the chemical pathways proposed to have contributed to the emergence of life on early Earth. Dissolved nitrogen oxide anions (NO), in particular nitrate (NO) and nitrite (NO), have been invoked in diverse origins-of-life chemistry, from the oligomerization of RNA to the emergence of protometabolism. Recent work has calculated the supply of NO from the prebiotic atmosphere to the ocean, and reported steady-state [NO] to be high across all plausible parameter space. These findings rest on the assumption that NO is stable in natural waters unless processed at a hydrothermal vent. Here, we show that NO is unstable in the reducing environment of early Earth. Sinks due to UV photolysis and reactions with reduced iron (Fe)…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOrigins and Evolution of Life · Distributed systems and fault tolerance
