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Biogeochemical explanations for the world's most phosphate-rich lake, an origin-of-life analog

Earth Sciences

Biogeochemical explanations for the world's most phosphate-rich lake, an origin-of-life analog

S. Haas, K. P. Sinclair, et al.

This groundbreaking research by Sebastian Haas, Kimberly Poppy Sinclair, and David C. Catling reveals the secret behind the surprisingly high phosphate concentrations in Last Chance Lake, Canada. Their findings suggest that ancient evaporative soda lakes on basaltic rocks could have provided the essential conditions for prebiotic nucleoside phosphorylation, a crucial step in the origin of life.... show more
Abstract
Environmental phosphate concentrations are typically much lower (~10^-6 M) than needed for prebiotic phosphorylation of nucleosides, critical for the origin of life. Here, we tested hypotheses explaining highly concentrated dissolved phosphate in carbonate-rich “soda” lakes by examining phosphorus and nitrogen cycling in Last Chance Lake and Goodenough Lake, Canada. We find a lack of geochemical phosphorus precipitation, that sedimentary calcium is in dolomite rather than apatite, and that N2-fixation rates, probably suppressed by high salinity, are too low to create significant biological phosphate demand. Thus, nitrogen-limitation of biological production and precipitation of calcium-rich carbonate instead of apatite combine to allow unimpeded evaporative phosphate buildup in Last Chance Lake to the highest known natural levels (37 mM) due to small biological and geochemical phosphorus sinks. Forming on basaltic rock, which was likely common on early Earth, evaporative soda lakes were consequently plausible origin-of-life settings with sufficient phosphate for prebiotic synthesis.
Publisher
Communications Earth & Environment
Published On
Jan 09, 2024
Authors
Sebastian Haas, Kimberly Poppy Sinclair, David C. Catling
Tags
phosphate concentrations
Last Chance Lake
prebiotic synthesis
nitrogen cycling
origin of life
salinity
geochemical processes
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