Can the Timing of the Origin of Life Be Inferred from Trends in the Growth of Organismal Complexity?
David A. Juckett

TL;DR
This paper explores when life began by analyzing trends in biological complexity over time, suggesting life may have originated before Earth's formation.
Contribution
The paper introduces a novel approach using complexity growth trends to infer the timing of life's origin.
Findings
Biological complexity measures show a linear increase over the last 4 billion years.
Extrapolation suggests life's origin around 8.6 billion years ago, matching cosmic formation peaks.
This supports the panspermia hypothesis that life may have originated elsewhere in the universe.
Abstract
The origin of life embodies two fundamental questions: how and when did life begin? It is commonly conjectured that life began on Earth around 4 billion years ago. This requires that the complex organization of RNA, DNA, triplet codon, protein, and lipid membrane (RDTPM) architecture was easy to establish between the time the Earth cooled enough for liquid water and the time when early microorganisms appeared. These bracketing events create a narrow window of time to construct a completely operational self-replicating organic system of very high complexity. Another conjecture is that life did not begin on Earth but was seeded from life-bearing space objects (e.g., asteroids, comets, space dust), commonly referred to as panspermia. The second conjecture implies that life formed somewhere else and was part of the solar nebula, originating from an earlier generation star where there was…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOrigins and Evolution of Life · Earth Systems and Cosmic Evolution · Space Science and Extraterrestrial Life
