4.6 Article

Six 'Must-Have' Minerals for Life's Emergence: Olivine, Pyrrhotite, Bridgmanite, Serpentine, Fougerite and Mackinawite

Journal

LIFE-BASEL
Volume 10, Issue 11, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/life10110291

Keywords

astrobiology; Hadean; carbonic ocean; proton gradient; redox gradient; solar system; submarine alkaline vents; emergence of life; exoplanets

Funding

  1. NASA, through the NASA Astrobiology Institute [NNH13ZDA017C]

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Life cannot emerge on a planet or moon without the appropriate electrochemical disequilibria and the minerals that mediate energy-dissipative processes. Here, it is argued that four minerals, olivine ([Mg>Fe](2)SiO4), bridgmanite ([Mg,Fe]SiO3), serpentine ([Mg,Fe,](2-3)Si2O5[OH)](4)), and pyrrhotite (Fe(1-x)S), are an essential requirement in planetary bodies to produce such disequilibria and, thereby, life. Yet only two minerals, fougerite ([Fe6x2+Fe6(x-1)3+O12H2(7-3x)](2+)center dot[(CO2-)center dot 3H(2)O](2-)) and mackinawite (Fe[Ni]S), are vital-comprising precipitate membranes-as initial free energy conductors and converters of such disequilibria, i.e., as the initiators of a CO2-reducing metabolism. The fact that wet and rocky bodies in the solar system much smaller than Earth or Venus do not reach the internal pressure (>= 23 GPa) requirements in their mantles sufficient for producing bridgmanite and, therefore, are too reduced to stabilize and emit CO2-the staple of life-may explain the apparent absence or negligible concentrations of that gas on these bodies, and thereby serves as a constraint in the search for extraterrestrial life. The astrobiological challenge then is to search for worlds that (i) are large enough to generate internal pressures such as to produce bridgmanite or (ii) boast electron acceptors, including imported CO2, from extraterrestrial sources in their hydrospheres.

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