The Solar System

(Marvins-Underground-K-12) #1
CHAPTER 26 | ASTROBIOLOGY: LIFE ON OTHER WORLDS 591

environment is called an extremophile. Maybe you have friends
like that.
Linguists can fi gure out the vocabulary of the long-vanished
Indo-European language by comparing words in modern lan-
guages such as English, Spanish, Russian, Greek, and Hindi that
evolved from it. In much the same way, biologists can work out the
DNA sequences of ancient species by comparing the sequences of
their present-day descendants. Th is type of analysis indicates that
the creature that was ancestor to all life on Earth today resembled
present-day single-celled organisms known as archaea, especially
the extremophile types of archaea that are tolerant of high tem-
peratures, called thermophiles (Figure 26-8b). Some biologists
think this is evidence that life began near volcanic vents on the sea

Extremophiles


Scientists on Earth are fi nding life in places previously judged
inhospitable, such as the bottoms of ice-covered lakes in
Antarctica, far underground inside solid rock, and among the
cinders at the summits of extinct volcanoes (■ Figure 26-8a). An
organism that can survive and even thrive in an extreme


■ Figure 26-7


Complex life has developed on Earth only recently. If the entire history of
Earth were represented in a time line (left), you have to examine the end of
the line closely to see details such as life leaving the oceans and dinosaurs
appearing. The age of humans would still be only a thin line at the top of
your diagram. If the history of Earth were a year-long videotape, humans
would not appear until the last hours of December 31.


Billion years ago Million years ago

First anthropoids

Age of humans

Life on land

Formation of Earth

Cambrian period

Dec

Nov

Oct

Sept

Aug

July

June

May

April

March

Feb

Jan

First horses

First flowering
plants

Last
trilobites

Coal-forming
forests

First forests

First life on land

Age of
marine
invertebrates

Age of
fishes

Age of
amphibians

Age of
reptiles
(dinosaurs)

Age of
mammals

Ocean life only

First birds

First primitive
mammals

Cambrian
explosion

Precambrian
period

Origin of life

4

4.6

3

2

1

00

100

200

300

400

500

600

Cretaceous

Jurassic

Triassic

Permian

Pennsylvanian

Mississippian

Devonian

Silurian

Ordovician

Cambrian

Pre-
cambrian

Tertiary
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