Life Began With a Planetary Mega-Organism, page
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ATS Members have flagged this thread 4 times


reply posted on 2-12-2011 @ 09:10 AM by charles1952
reply to post by Xcalibur254



No doubt at all that this is highly speculative and interesting, but I find my brain getting trapped in a chicken and egg loop here. Let me show you why:

The latest results suggest LUCA was the result of early life's fight to survive, attempts at which turned the ocean into a global genetic swap shop for hundreds of millions of years.
So, how can LUCA be the start of all life on earth? Wouldn't "early life" be the common ancestor? I'm ashamed to admit I didn't read the article, so feel free to mock if it's deserved.
edit on 2-12-2011 by charles1952 because: Fix quote



reply posted on 2-12-2011 @ 09:18 AM by Xcalibur254
reply to post by charles1952



LUCA is not the earliest common ancestor, it is the last. From LUCA three distinct types of organisms emerged, prokaryotes, eukaryotes, and plants. Any ancestors LUCA has are also common ancestors for us, but it is with LUCA where the diversity of life really begins.



reply posted on 2-12-2011 @ 09:22 AM by charles1952
reply to post by Xcalibur254



Dear Xcalibur254,

I can't ask for forgiveness any more ashamedly than I do now. You mentioned those points in the Opening Post and they just didn't sink in for some reason. I didn't read the source article and didn't fully understand your post before I typed my response. Inexcusable.

With respect,
Charles1952


reply posted on 2-12-2011 @ 09:54 AM by Maxmars
Here are some more comments and information regarding LUCA. www.abovetopsecret.com...

This theory raises some significant questions. There are more than a few different opinions about it, scientifically and otherwise.

Good thread!


reply posted on 2-12-2011 @ 09:59 AM by Maxmars
reply to post by WiseThinker



It's OK to look at any posted BAN item from the perspective of a different forum. So we usually don't discourage new threads on previous breaking news items. For example this material could be looked at from a scientific perspective to question the issues about cellular structure and such biomechanical aspects; or a 'creationist' perspective with an eye towards the potential for this to be embraced by different spiritual and cultural doctrines and histories.


reply posted on 3-12-2011 @ 12:16 AM by Astyanax
reply to post by Xcalibur254


What a feast for the imagination! LUCA is reminiscent of the Pattern Jugglers, gigantic organic mats floating in the oceans of numerous worlds in the Revelation Space universe invented by the science-fiction writer Alastair Reynolds. I wonder if Reynolds had any contact with people working on this idea in its early stages?

Thank you for posting about this exciting and inspiring concept.

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