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      Non‐protein amino acids identified in carbon‐rich Hayabusa particles

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          A chemical-petrologic classification for the chondritic meteorites

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            Endogenous production, exogenous delivery and impact-shock synthesis of organic molecules: an inventory for the origins of life.

            Sources of organic molecules on the early Earth divide into three categories: delivery by extraterrestrial objects; organic synthesis driven by impact shocks; and organic synthesis by other energy sources (such as ultraviolet light or electrical discharges). Estimates of these sources for plausible end-member oxidation states of the early terrestrial atmosphere suggest that the heavy bombardment before 3.5 Gyr ago either produced or delivered quantities of organics comparable to those produced by other energy sources. Which sources of prebiotic organics were quantitatively dominant depends strongly on the composition of the early terrestrial atmosphere. In the event of an early strongly reducing atmosphere, production by atmospheric shocks seems to have dominated that due to electrical discharges. Organic synthesis by ultraviolet light may, in turn, have dominated shock production, but only if a long-wavelength absorber such as H2S were supplied to the atmosphere at a rate sufficient for synthesis to have been limited by ultraviolet flux, rather than by reactant abundance. In the apparently more likely case of an early terrestrial atmosphere of intermediate oxidation state, atmospheric shocks were probably of little importance for direct organic production. For [H2]/[CO2] ratios of approximately 0.1, net organic production was some three orders of magnitude lower than for reducing atmospheres, with delivery of intact exogenous organics in interplanetary dust particles (IDPs) and ultraviolet production being the most important sources. At still lower [H2]/[CO2] ratios, IDPs may have been the dominant source of prebiotic organics on the early Earth. Endogenous, exogenous and impact-shock sources of organics could each have made a significant contribution to the origins of life.
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              Enantiomeric excesses in meteoritic amino acids.

              Gas chromatographic-mass spectral analyses of the four stereoisomers of 2-amino-2,3-dimethylpentanoic acid (dl-alpha-methylisoleucine and dl-alpha-methylalloisoleucine) obtained from the Murchison meteorite show that the L enantiomer occurs in excess (7.0 and 9.1%, respectively) in both of the enantiomeric pairs. Similar results were obtained for two other alpha-methyl amino acids, isovaline and alpha-methylnorvaline, although the alpha hydrogen analogs of these amino acids, alpha-amino-n-butyric acid and norvaline, were found to be racemates. With the exception of alpha-amino-n-butyric acid, these amino acids are either unknown or of limited occurrence in the biosphere. Because carbonaceous chondrites formed 4.5 billion years ago, the results are indicative of an asymmetric influence on organic chemical evolution before the origin of life.
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                Author and article information

                Contributors
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                Journal
                Meteoritics & Planetary Science
                Meteorit & Planetary Scien
                Wiley
                1086-9379
                1945-5100
                April 2022
                March 08 2022
                April 2022
                : 57
                : 4
                : 776-793
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Astrobiology Analytical Laboratory Solar System Exploration Division NASA Goddard Space Flight Center Greenbelt Maryland 20771 USA
                [2 ]Department of Earth Sciences Royal Holloway University of London Egham Surrey TW20 0EX UK
                [3 ]School of Physical Sciences The Open University Walton Hall Milton Keynes MK7 6AA UK
                Article
                10.1111/maps.13794
                5053650f-c03e-4e8f-bda1-b8dd7a7a4b7a
                © 2022

                http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/termsAndConditions#vor

                http://doi.wiley.com/10.1002/tdm_license_1.1

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