4.8 Article

Lightning strikes as a major facilitator of prebiotic phosphorus reduction on early Earth

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NATURE COMMUNICATIONS
卷 12, 期 1, 页码 -

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NATURE RESEARCH
DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-21849-2

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  1. Yale University
  2. MRSEC Shared User Facilities at the University of Chicago [NSF DMR-1420709]
  3. University of Leeds

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The article suggests that lightning strikes could have been a major source of essential phosphorus on early Earth, potentially concentrating reactive phosphorus on landmasses in tropical regions.
When hydrated, phosphides such as the mineral schreibersite, (Fe,Ni)(3)P, allow for the synthesis of important phosphorus-bearing organic compounds. Such phosphides are common accessory minerals in meteorites; consequently, meteorites are proposed to be a main source of prebiotic reactive phosphorus on early Earth. Here, we propose an alternative source for widespread phosphorus reduction, arguing that lightning strikes on early Earth potentially formed 10-1000kg of phosphide and 100-10,000 kg of phosphite and hypophosphite annually. Therefore, lightning could have been a significant source of prebiotic, reactive phosphorus which would have been concentrated on landmasses in tropical regions. Lightning strikes could likewise provide a continual source of prebiotic reactive phosphorus independent of meteorite flux on other Earth-like planets, potentially facilitating the emergence of terrestrial life indefinitely. Determining the origins of life on Earth is confounded by the fact that the sources of nutrients necessary to create early life forms remain mysterious. Here the authors show that lightning strikes could have supplied a major source of essential phosphorus on early Earth.

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