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Life

Self-starter: Life got going all on its own

By Catherine Brahic

21 April 2010

New Scientist. Science news and long reads from expert journalists, covering developments in science, technology, health and the environment on the website and the magazine.

Black smokers, hotbeds for life

(Image: Charles Fisher/NSF Ridge 2000 programme)

IN THE beginning there were Ida and Luca. The initial Darwinian ancestor – Ida – and the last universal common ancestor – Luca – assembled themselves from the spare parts sloshing around on the early Earth. Once all the ingredients were in place, it looks like life was all but inevitable.

The finding comes from recent discoveries about the behaviour of chemicals thought to have been present on the primordial Earth, relating to two key stages in the evolution of life. Ida was the first molecule that was able to self-replicate. Once it…

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