Aim: How did life begin ?

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Aim: How did life begin ?. HW #5 Read pages 423-428 Pg. 428 section 17-2 answer Q 1-4. Billions of years ago, life on Earth is thought by many scientists to have begun as simple, single organisms. About a billion years ago, increasingly complex multi-cellular organisms began to evolve. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Aim: How did life begin ?

HW #5Read pages 423-428Pg. 428 section 17-2 answer Q 1-4

• Billions of years ago, life on Earth is thought by many scientists to

have begun as simple, single organisms. About a billion years ago, increasingly complex multi-

cellular organisms began to evolve.

Do Now:KWL(What is Life ?)

K W L

Conditions of Primitive Earth

H2 He CH4 NH3

Evolution of the Present Atmosphere

The heterotroph hypothesis describes the possible change of the earth’s atmosphere to

support life, as we know it.

Organic compounds are compounds found in living things.

They contain carbon, Hydrogen and Oxygen

• Nucleic acids• Carbohydrates• Proteins• Lipids

Stanley Miller's (and subsequent) experiments have not proven life originated in this way, only that conditions thought to have existed over 3 billion years ago were such that the spontaneous (inorganic) formation of organic macromolecules could have taken place.

KWL

• Go back and fill in the L column

Aim: How do we define Life ?

• What do living things do that non-living things cannot do?

Life Functions

• Digestion - breakdown of food to simpler molecules which can enter the cells

Circulation - the movement of materials within an organism or its cells

Life Functions

• Movement - (locomotion) change in position by a living thing

• Excretion - removal of waste products by an organism (wastes may include carbon dioxide, water, and urea in urine and sweat)

Life Functions

• Respiration - process which converts the energy in food to ATP (the form of energy which can be used by the cells)

• Reproduction - the making of more organisms of one's own kind -- not needed by an individual living thing but is needed by its species

Life Functions

Regulation - the control of the various activities of an organism (mostly involves the nervous system and endocrine glands in complex animals)

Synthesis - the production of more complex substances by combining two or more simpler substances

All living things perform life functions from the smallest organism to the largest

Uni-cellular protozoanWhale Shark

Digestion

Circulation and Movement

Excretion

Respiration

Reproduction

Paramecium Conjugation Marsupial birth

Regulation

Phototropism in plant shoots

Synthesis

All cells synthesize compounds for use in and out of the cell