Constraining Prebiotic Chemistry Through a Better Understanding of Earth's Earliest Environments
Timothy W. Lyons, Karyn Rogers, Ramanarayanan Krishnamurthy, Loren, Williams, Simone Marchi, Edward Schwieterman, Noah Planavsky, Christopher, Reinhard

TL;DR
This paper emphasizes the importance of understanding Earth's earliest environments to better inform the search for life beyond Earth, highlighting the need for interdisciplinary research into prebiotic chemistry and early planetary conditions.
Contribution
It advocates for a comprehensive, interdisciplinary approach to studying Earth's early environments to elucidate the origins of life and guide astrobiological exploration.
Findings
Early Earth's environments influenced prebiotic chemical pathways.
Interdisciplinary research enhances understanding of life's emergence.
Insights into Earth's early conditions inform extraterrestrial life searches.
Abstract
Any search for present or past life beyond Earth should consider the initial processes and related environmental controls that might have led to its start. As on Earth, such an understanding lies well beyond how simple organic molecules become the more complex biomolecules of life, because it must also include the key environmental factors that permitted, modulated, and most critically facilitated the prebiotic pathways to life's emergence. Moreover, we ask how habitability, defined in part by the presence of liquid water, was sustained so that life could persist and evolve to the point of shaping its own environment. Researchers have successfully explored many chapters of Earth's coevolving environments and biosphere spanning the last few billion years through lenses of sophisticated analytical and computational techniques, and the findings have profoundly impacted the search for life…
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