The atmosphere of Early Earth is widely speculated to have been reducing. The
Miller–Urey experiment, related to some hypotheses for the origin of life, entailed reactions in a reducing atmosphere composed of a mixed atmosphere of
methane,
ammonia and
hydrogen sulfide. Some hypotheses for the origin of life invoke a reducing atmosphere consisting of
hydrogen cyanide (HCN). Experiments show that HCN can polymerize in the presence of ammonia to give various products including
amino acids. The same principle applies to
Mars,
Venus and
Titan.
Cyanobacteria are suspected to be the first
photoautotrophs that evolved
oxygenic photosynthesis, which over the latter half of the
Archaen eon eventually depleted all reductants in the Earth's oceans, terrestrial surface and atmosphere, gradually increasing the oxygen concentration in the atmosphere, changing it to what is known as an oxidizing atmosphere. This rising oxygen initially led to
a 300 million-year-long ice age that devastated the then-mostly
anaerobe-dominated
biosphere, forcing the surviving anaerobic colonies to evolve into
symbiotic microbial mats with the newly evolved
aerobes. Some aerobic
bacteria eventually became
endosymbiont within other anaerobes (likely
archaea), and the resultant
symbiogenesis led to the evolution of an entirely new lineage of life — the
eukaryotes, who took advantage of
mitochondrial aerobic respiration to power their cellular activities, allowing life to thrive and evolve into ever more complex forms. The increased oxygen in the atmosphere also eventually created the
ozone layer, which shielded away harmful
ionizing ultraviolet radiation that otherwise would have
photodissociated away
surface water and rendered life impossible on land and the ocean surface. In contrast to the hypothesized early reducing atmosphere, evidence exists that
Hadean atmospheric oxygen levels were similar to today's. These results suggest prebiotic building blocks were delivered from elsewhere in the galaxy. The results, however, do not contradict existing theories on life's journey from anaerobic to aerobic organisms. The results quantify the nature of gas molecules containing carbon, hydrogen, and sulphur in the earliest atmosphere, but they shed no light on the much later rise of free oxygen in the air. ==See also==