Biology Now, 2e

(Ben Green) #1
Ingredients for Life ■ 43

and replied, “Let me put it this way, Enrico.


If God didn’t do it this way, he overlooked a


good bet!”


Miller and Urey’s experiment, which became


an instant classic in the scientific community,


demonstrated that the basic chemicals for life


could arise under natural conditions. Miller


continued to perform spark discharge experi-


ments, tweaking the experimental conditions


and types of gases in the hope of producing


more amino acids. But for an unknown reason,


perhaps lack of time, Miller never published or


followed up on many of his results—that is, until


the mysterious box sitting on Jeffrey Bada’s shelf


was finally opened.


One Picture,


a Thousand


Experiments


In 2007, Bada was visiting the University of


Te x a s t o g i v e a le c t u r e. H i s t a l k w a s s c he d-


uled immediately after a talk by another close


friend of Miller’s, Antonio Lazcano, a biolo-


gist at the School of Sciences at the National


Autonomous University of Mexico in Mexico


City. The two men agreed to review each


other’s lecture slides to make sure their talks


didn’t overlap.


One of Lazcano’s slides caught Bada’s eye.


It was a picture of a small glass vial, labeled as


containing a residue from Miller’s early exper-


iments. Bada asked Lazcano about it. Lazcano


explained that during a visit to his friend, Miller


had pulled a cardboard box off a shelf, lifted out


the vial, and let Lazcano take a picture. At the


time, Miller told Lazcano that it was one of the


leftover samples of his spark discharge experi-


ments. Miller had saved them all.


“I was flabbergasted,” says Bada. “I’d known


Stanley since 1965, and he never once mentioned


it.” It dawned on Bada that the box might still


exist. He called his lab and asked if anyone had


seen the box that Cleaves had given him four


years earlier. As soon as Bada returned to the


lab, he found and opened the box. It was like a


scientist’s Christmas; the box was full of care-


fully labeled plastic boxes containing thin glass


vials, many with films of dried brown, tar-like
gunk in the bottom. “It was on the order of
200–300 vials,” says Bada (Figure 3.3). “It
was extracts from experiments throughout the
course of his life.”
Luckily, Miller kept notebooks detailing the
specific contents of each vial. He had performed
two other experiments shortly after his original
spark discharge work, using variations on the
original apparatus. In one, a different method
generated the spark. In another, which caught
Bada’s attention, hot steam was injected directly
into the spark chamber.

Figure 3.3


Electric discharge samples from Miller’s experiments


HENDERSON (JIM) CLEAVES


Jim Cleaves is an organic geochemist at the
Carnegie Institution for Science in Washington,
DC. As a graduate student of Stanley Miller in
2003, he discovered old vials from Miller’s
1950s experiments. Today, Cleaves continues
to study how life arose on Earth.
Free download pdf