Talk:Miller–Urey experiment/Archive 1

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Archive 1

Advanced experiments

Could anybody elaborate on more advanced experiments please? Including the molecules produced in the experiment

-- HJH

—Preceding unsigned comment added by Hannes Hirzel (talkcontribs) 01:09, 24 December 2001

Urey-Miller or Miller-Urey

Isn't this usually called a Urey-Miller experiment? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Bryan Derksen (talkcontribs) 01:41, 24 December 2001

I've always known at as the Urey-Miller experiment. But tastes change and modern usage seems to be to give Miller's contribution more of the emphasis it deserves by reordering the names as Miller-Urey.
However, either way, we should be consistent within the article. So I will now update the name ordering throughout. -- Solipsist 08:43, 20 Mar 2005 (UTC)

Reply by Double Think: Miller was the student, so Urey-Miller is appropriate. Double Think 10:39, 26 February 2007 (UTC)

Interesting point

Another interesting point about this experiment: it makes it plausible that life could originate on Jupiter (since Jupiter's atmosphere is vaguely similar to what they used in the experiment). But it suggests that life could not have originated on Earth (if you do the experiment with gas mixtures similar to postulated early Earth atmospheres (or more recent ones) nothing interesting happens).

Actually, I think that all of the various experiments have liquid water in common, and that's not something that's readily available on Jupiter. Uranus and Neptune, on the other hand, could actually have layers of liquid water within them. If such layers exist, then they could have a volume on the order of the entire Earth. That's an amazing volume for an ecosystem to inhabit, though at this point it's sheer speculation.

Even if interesting biomolecules weren't easily formed in Earth's early atmosphere, life could still have originated on Earth if those biomolecules were formed elsewhere (eg on comets) and were then imported to Earth along with the rest of the cometary material. I believe this is considered one of the more plausible scenarios currently.

—Preceding unsigned comment added by Bryan Derksen (talkcontribs) 08:11, 24 December 2001

Thanks you, Bryan, for the elaboration. I added subtitles. --HJH —Preceding unsigned comment added by Hannes Hirzel (talkcontribs) 09:14, 24 December 2001
no problem, my pleasure. :) —Preceding unsigned comment added by Conversion script (talkcontribs) 15:51, 25 February 2002

Amino acids

Why doesn't the Miller Page say something about the fact that He and Urey only produced 13 of the 21 basic amino acids? Or that nobody has since done any better (to my knowledge at least).

Here are a couple of Links that confirm what I just said.

RSB

—Preceding unsigned comment added by 66.159.217.172 (talkcontribs) 15:14, 8 May 2005

It already said that "some" of the amino acids of life were created in the experiment, which implies "not all", but I'll add the specific number now that you mention it. I should point out that the earthage.org site appears to be a creationist website, and as such using it as a sole reference for anything other than creationsm-specific articles is unlikely to stick. Bryan 19:02, 8 May 2005 (UTC)
Just expressing my opinion - since I didn't see something similar to it here: both evolutionism and creation idea are somehow... not scientific. Evolutionism - and this specific article - is claiming to explain the origin of life - but offers no detail about the specific aminoacids that were obtained, and how much/little they have to do with life, or why aren't we having a living cell produced in the laboratory from dead materia. The creation idea, on the other hand, has all needed proof in scientists hands - except that "God" - which of course can't be used in an experiment... Long-story-short: o common-sense note to this article would be: This is just a theory, or a religious belief about origin of life - like any others existent. In my opinion, evolutionism is a religion - because I need some faith to fill its gaps. --79.113.64.111 (talk) 16:34, 25 October 2008 (UTC)
In short, your sources look unreliable. None of them seem to link to primary scientific literature, they appear to be editorial pieces. --Pstanton (talk) 06:39, 5 March 2009 (UTC)

Problems with work

Why no talk about the problems with his work as proof? There are many arguments and flaws with his work. The amino acids were "collected" in a special chamber, to avoid being destroyed by the electricity. This just discredits his work. It cannot function as prove. Does anyone else see this? User:172.212.158.123 22:16, 24 August 2005 (UTC)

I see that it seems to claim it 'proved' life can be made from a 'primordial soup', without talking about the problems. I'm no scientist, but I've read of numerous critiques of the experiment. In short, User: 172.212.158.123: I agree.Ben davison 20:11, 24 September 2005 (UTC)

Could the agenda driven creationists stay away and leave the encyclopedias to the rational people.

Maybe you should tell us how there were no problems then, if that's what you think. What about the fact that the experiment was engineered by people, when there were no people around to do so when it supposedly actually happened, severely denting the chances. Or that it (I have heard) only produced one-handed molecules, when life needs both handedness? Or that the early atmosphere supposed by Miller and Urey is now thought not to have been correct? And I suppose we have an agenda, but you don't? How very short-sighted of you. Please sign your comments, also.

This article might do well to take note of this:

"Unbiased writing does not present only the most popular view; it does not assert the most popular view is correct after presenting all views; it does not assert that some sort of intermediate view among the different views is the correct one. Presenting all points of view says, more or less, that p-ists believe that p, and q-ists believe that q, and that's where the debate stands at present. Ideally, presenting all points of view also gives a great deal of background on who believes that p and q and why, and which view is more popular (being careful not to associate popularity with correctness)." Ben davison 16:10, 25 October 2005 (UTC)

Life doesn't need "both handedness". All living organisms today use only left-handed amino acids. - 68.33.120.32 19:26, 25 October 2005 (UTC)

Sorry, I was trying to remember what I had read about it. I knew there was something about the handedness thing, though:

"In all living systems the building blocks of the DNA and RNA exist exclusively in the right-handed form, while the amino acids in virtually all proteins in living systems, with very rare exception, occur only in the left-handed form.

The dilemma for materialists is that all "spark and soup-like" experiments produce a mixture of 50% left (levo) and 50% right-handed (dextro) products. Such a mixture of dextro and levo amino acids is called a "racemic mixture." Unfortunately, such mixtures are completely useless for the spontaneous generation of life."

Complex molecules such as DNA and proteins are built by adding one building block at a time onto an ever-growing chain. In a "primordial soup" made up of equal proportions of right and left-handed building blocks, there is an equal probability at each step of adding either a right or left-handed building block. Consequently, it is a mathematical absurdity to propose that only right-handed nucleotides would be added time after time without a single left-handed one being added to a growing DNA molecule. Sooner or later an incorrect, left-handed nucleotide will be added. The same goes for proteins. Every time another amino acid is added to the growing chain of amino acids the chances are virtually certain that both right and left-handed amino acids will be added." [1]

It is not a mathematical impossibility (I assume that's what you meant by the relatively ill-defined word "absurdity"), any more than it's mathematically impossible to, for example, randomly pick a finite number of all white billiard balls out of a bag that contains equal, but much larger than the number picked, numbers of black and white balls. It may not be a particularly large chance, but it's most definitely not zero. Now, keeping this in mind, take another look at the timescales we're dealing with (The article suggests 100 million years - that's 1 followed by EIGHT zeros. Convert that to seconds and you're looking at 3.1 x 10^14 - FOURTEEN orders of magnitude!), and then consider the sheer number of randomly reacting molecules across across the entire surface of the planet in even a single second out of those 100 million years, if in fluid or gaseous form constantly being moved about by diffusion, convection, etc - is the emergence of such a level of complexity out of their interaction REALLY mathematically impossible? Just very unlikely? Perhaps even quite likely? How about if we include every other planet in the universe in the equation, which is yet another colossal number - is it mathematically impossible then that finitely complex arrangements of chemicals, capable of self-copying and surviving for a finite time greater than the time taken to self-copy in their respective environment, would arise anywhere at all?

Ben davison 21:53, 25 October 2005 (UTC)

This criticism of the Urey-Miller experiment appear to be assuming that the experiment is being held to "prove" more than it was actually intended to prove. The Urey-Miller experiment isn't supposed to be some grand demonstration of abiogenesis that starts with sterile water on day one and ends one week later with "thus we refute God! Haha!". Instead, it merely attempts to show that the spontaneous formation of basic building blocks of life is plausible under conditions similar to what might have existed early in the solar system's history. Many of the various remaining details are the subject of other theories and speculations, it's not necessary to nail each and every one right here. For example, I recall reading some recent work that showed that circularly polarized UV light could preferentially destroy left- or right-handed amino acids, depending on whether it was polarized clockwise or counterclockwise, and since space has a good deal of circularly polarized light it could have resulted in a non-racemic mixture in the early solar system. This isn't directly related to the Urey-Miller results, though, so it's not necessary to go into great detail about it here.
To summarize, all that Miller and Urey were trying to show with this experiment was that the early Earth could have been rich in complex organic molecules produced by abiotic means. Getting from there to the first living organism is a separate issue that doesn't need to be thoroughly addressed in this article, there are others with broader focus to cover that. Bryan 01:18, 26 October 2005 (UTC)
interesting, the above enantio-enrichement in space has been observed in the analysis of the murchison meteorite, which solves one of the creationist arguing points Xcomradex 04:09, 26 May 2006 (UTC)
It isn't mathematically impossible that (for example) every amino acid added was in the levo form. However it is remarkably unlikely, even given the billion year timespan. As a qualified chemist I feel obliged to disagree with this, but in terms of evidence Chemistry World had an article recently which implied that the 100% levo amino acids could have been synthetically catalysed on rocks. I will try and find the reference, though I am sure that the rock-stereospecific-catalyst argument is simply not the case. Spuddddddd 2/02/08 —Preceding unsigned comment added by 193.60.90.97 (talk) 01:33, 3 February 2008 (UTC)

New Diagram

I like the new diagram that has been added to the article however, it incorrectly shows H2 being evaporated from the water bath when it should be H2O which is evaporating and cycling through the system...just like the water cycle on earth does. Could someone change it?--Deglr6328 06:44, 6 November 2005 (UTC)

New Photograph

I have uploaded a high-res photo: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:Miller-urey.jpg Don't know how to encorporate it into the Wiki page, though ... Anyone care to swap it for the current one?

since its the same exact image except better quality I just cropped the version you uploaded and reuploaded it over the older one here using the same name. --Deglr6328 05:07, 19 September 2006 (UTC)

Number of amino acids

The following article - the original article indicates that only 2 amino acids were identified, though others may well have been in the mixture in very small amounts. Miller 1953 paperhttp://www.issol.org/miller/miller1953.pdf. Why would the number 13 of 21 be used in this discussion?

I think the 13 of 21 quote was added based on information from a site critical of abiogenesis theories, so it probably got assumed that this was a safe minimum to mention. See the links at the top of the talk page. Sfnhltb 16:21, 20 March 2006 (UTC)
all amino acids have been created with different atmospheres and UV, lightning and heat

Hello. This page (find "you get thirteen") is from an interview with Miller in 1996. http://www.accessexcellence.org/WN/NM/miller.html Double Think 19:05, 21 February 2007 (UTC)

Formatting: Earth's early atmosphere-section

This may have been brought up before, but the section on Earth's early atmosphere is oddly formatted. The second and third paragraph are direct quotes from a website[2] (which is not clearly indicated).

I'm not even sure why these paragraphes are quoted from another source, instead of being rewritten for this article. -- Ec5618 22:40, 22 August 2006 (UTC)

Recent related studies: Trainer material

This section says, "See also the work of Melissa Trainer an astrobiologist who in 2004 demonstrated empirically that life could have formed on Earth through the interaction of methane, carbon dioxide and ultraviolet light (sunlight)." The Trainer work I found had nothing to do with the direct formation of life or BIOmolecules. It had to do with the formation of organic haze, aerosols and clathrates. While this may be relevant to the early earth atmosphere and that of other objects in our solar system (Mars, Titan), there is nothing that I could find in Trainer's work that "demonstrated empirically that life could have formed ...". In fact, the conclusion of the cited paper is: "After life arose, the haze may thus have provided food for biota." Note: AFTER life arose (by other means; they cite Miller), organic haze MIGHT have been food.

The work is a lot of physical chemistry but not biochemistry or biology. You might as well add every physical chemistry paper about atmospheric ozone, UV penetration, greenhouse effects or lightning to the Miller-Urey article. Trainer's own web page describes her research interests as "Planetary atmospheres; Mars methane chemistry; heterogenous chemistry" and there is nothing directly related to astrobiology, certainly not as directly related as the Miller-Urey and many other experiments.

Furthermore, all of the Trainer papers I found were multi-author works. The cited work is by: Trainer MG, Pavlov AA, Curtis DB, McKay CP, Worsnop DR, Delia AE, Toohey DW, Toon OB, Tolbert MA. (Tolbert is corresponding author; Toon is a senior aerosol researcher; McKay is a senior NASA scientist with many papers on astrobiology and the origin of life; Trainer was a grad student; most of the others have many more publications than Trainer and specialize in mass spec or physics or other areas.) To assign exclusive credit to Trainer is a serious breach of scientific ethics ("theft of credit").

As written, the results of the cited paper are grossly overstated -- make that misstated -- ("demonstrated empirically that life ...") and barely relevant to the Miller-Urey results. On this basis, I think that reference to the Trainer material should be deleted.AdderUser 14:38, 27 October 2006 (UTC)

Irrelevant Trainer Material Reinserted and should be removed

This paragraph in "Other Experiments": "In 2006 another experiment showed that a thick organic haze might have blanketed Early Earth.[6] An organic haze can form over a wide range of methane and carbon dioxide concentrations, believed to be present in the atmosphere of Early Earth. After forming, these organic molecules would have floated down all over the Earth, allowing life to flourish globally.[7]" has been inserted, but I can't figure out by whom or when. The "organic haze" studied by Tolbert, McKay, Toon, et al. (Trainer being the grad student on the project) has nothing to do with the stages of biogenesis relevant to the Miller-Urey experiment. It belongs in the "Early Earth" article and possibly other places, but it seems to me to be someone's self-serving attempt to get Trainer's paper cited herein. The PNAS authors argue that "haze" did not contribute to the formation of biomolecules (cf., Miller-Urey and related experiments by MacNevin, Wilde, Bada, et al.) but could have been "food" for living organisms, once formed, millions of years later: NOT RELEVANT to this Miller-Urey article. Post it to Early Earth, etc., but not here.

There are hundreds of articles on the physical organic chemistry of the early earth that are far more relevant to the Miller-Urey experiment than this Trainer material but that still do not belong in the Miller-Urey article.

Whoever is posting the Trainer material should sign their posts and, if they care to, disclose their relationship to Trainer and any conflicts of interest in this discussion section. And stop mucking up the main article on Miller-Urey with irrelevant material. AdderUser (talk) 11:50, 14 September 2008 (UTC)

References in Popular Media

There was a dramatization and explanation of the Miller-Urey Experiment in the 1980 science series Cosmos. Would it be appropriate to add? Porphyrous 20:20, 7 January 2007 (UTC)

Lock this page

I have undone the vandalism by a creationist that changed the number of amino acids found by the Urey-Miller experiment from 13 down to three.

I also noticed that the page has been repeatedly vandalized.

It would seem time to lock the page. How does that get accomplished? —Preceding unsigned comment added by Double Think (talkcontribs) 16:40, February 22, 2007

I agree with that remark. This is out of control. MisplacedFate1313 (talk) 04:43, 21 October 2008 (UTC)

new reference

Scientists Repeat Evolution's Most Famous Experiment describes work by Jeffrey Bada in which they use an atmosphere of carbon dioxide and nitrogen, but also introduce iron and carbonate minerals. The addition of the minerals prevents the formation of nitrites which destroy the amino acids.--mikeu 19:06, 5 April 2007 (UTC)

RNA Synthesis

I've been reading up on abiogenesis lately -- particularly Freeman Dyson's little book on the subject -- and sources seem to indicate that scenarios that promote the synthesis of amino acids are somewhat mutually exclusive from those that synthesize RNA.

This is not necessarily a fatal problem -- Dyson is of the opinion that there were two abiogenesis events, one that produced protein-based metabolism and the other that produced RNA-based heredity -- but it might be nice for those capable of sorting through the matter better than I can to add a comment on the RNA issue. MrG 4.225.210.139 12:13, 13 June 2007 (UTC)


Small ambiguity about methane being organic or inorganic

At the beginning of the article it says

"The experiment used water (H2O), methane (CH4), ammonia (NH3) and hydrogen (H2)..."

and a little later it says

"At the end of one week of continuous operation Miller and Urey observed that as much as 10-15% of the carbon within the system was now in the form of organic compounds."

I would like to point out that methane (CH4) is an organic chemical and so the above suggests that the experiment destroys organic chemicals (from 100% carbon in methane down to 10-15% of the carbon)! This needs rewording to say something along the lines of

"At the end of one week of continuous operation Miller and Urey observed that as much as 10-15% of the carbon within the system was now in the form of organic compounds other than methane."

--ManInStone 10:46, 2 July 2007 (UTC)

Number of amino acids (again)

This article is conflating the results of the Miller-Urey experiment with the results of other experiments that followed later. The article says that 13 amino acids were synthesized as well as sugars and lipids. This is flat wrong. The 1953 Science paper identifies only two amino acids (glycine and alanine) and no sugars and no lipids. Herb West 07:11, 6 August 2007 (UTC)

  • Later analysis of the samples obtained in the experiment show that more amino acids were formed than initially detected. We even have a source for this. - Mgm|(talk) 22:17, 23 October 2008 (UTC)

The billiard ball analogy

With reference to the remark that it is mathematically possible, even likely, for DNA to form out of the random action of molecules considering the time and numbers of molecules involved, may I suggest that the analogy of pulling only white billiard balls out of a bag containing equal numbers of white and black balls is not a good one for at least two reasons. First, you’d need a really big bag to get a comparative number. Second, you need to take intelligence out of the equation. There was no hand picking these particular billiard balls out of the bag according to the theory of evolution. We should rather think of an earthquake or some other natural cause shaking the bag and causing a white ball to drop out of the bag every time for as long as it takes to get the comparative number needed to form a DNA sequence. Actually, if your reasoning is true, then maybe all those jokes about a monkey writing a Shakespearean sonnet given enough time, or explosions in a clockshop creating a working clock etc. are true after all. Ruben, Nov. 16, 2007 —Preceding unsigned comment added by Rufrankarl (talkcontribs) 05:22, 16 November 2007 (UTC)

Actually, there was a really, really big bag, and the balls were really, really tiny. The "hand" is called chemistry, and while there is no intelligence behind it, it "knows" how to pick the right balls for the same reason a round hole "knows" not to admit a square peg. - (), 18:50, 23 January 2008 (UTC)
Funny to what lengths you materialistic atheists go to justify your materialism. Go on telling fairytales about how DNA emerged out of nothing when you cannot even logically explain on materialistic cause and effect terms the emergence of matter and life. And yet, you think you can reasonably argue in favor of your materialism, but whoever sees intelligence behind it, is a creationist. You are the same people who use their materialism and physics to discredit religion but pretend that you do not have any religious agenda. The truth is that you abuse science to prove your unfounded materialism that falls apart in the face of eternity. Sliponshoe (talk) 00:21, 28 May 2008 (UTC)

This is an encyclopedia, not a forum for opinion. You can be banned from the site for interjections like that Sliponshoe (your IP address is very easy to determine). For anyone interested in a more in-depth discussion of pre-biotic chemical evolution, I would direct you to a paper/chapter called "From Chemistry to Heredity" by Smith and Szathmary. Further, I am a theist. Yes, theist. Not atheist. I am also a biologist and an adamant evolutionist. Evolution cannot be denied in the face of overwhelming evidence. When one is willing to truly think on these things one realizes that any conflict between science and religious belief is contrived (not to mentiond extremely Western in nature). Evolution drops us off at agnosticism. Any jump to a conclusion beyond that (theism or atheism) is a leap of faith. Mrmb6b02 (talk) 13:41, 4 June 2008 (UTC)

dissent?

Why are there no dissenting points on this page? Every creation based post I see on wikipedia has dissenting points on it. —Preceding unsigned comment added by 75.140.9.81 (talk) 18:48, 7 January 2008 (UTC)

Agreed. This video on Youtube claims the Miller-Experiment has been completely disproven. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZQb6e1w1I9E&mode=related&search . I'd like to know how much of that was true. --Mithcoriel (talk) 21:01, 16 January 2008 (UTC)

None of it. (See also WP:NOT#FORUM.) - (), 19:51, 23 January 2008 (UTC)

We don't post dissent here merely for the sake of dissent; You can express your dissent all you want, but that doesn't mean we have to include it here.

The problem with nearly all creationist arguments is that they start with their conclusion and then spin, twist, distort and disassemble the evidence at hand until it no longer resembles what it looked like before they got their hands on it. In other words, they assume that their conclusion MUST be true, and then go about changing the world untill it resembles their conclusion. Oh, and they also tend to make stuff up when that's convenient for them. Guess what: doing this that way is not science. You can call it what you want, but if it doesn't adhere to the Scientific Principle, it is not science.

So, if you're not even going to be scientific, why on earth would we post your conclusions? I could dream up the idea that my ass created the world this morning as I was taking a shit, and the proceed to create all sorts of unsubstantiated, illogical, and unbelievable nonsense about my ass, it's shit, and how it created the world. I could say anything I wanted, true or not, fanciful or not, and call it science (It's not, but I can do it anyway). Now then, how valid is my claim of creating the world with my ass? Is it any more or less valid than claiming that "God" created the word in an vaguely specified manner? NO? Then why on earth would you post it in an encyclopedia?

So, you want to post a dissenting option? You have to find one that's from an actual scientist first. Good luck with that.

<nasty_laugh>Hehehe!</nasty_laugh> Couldn't resist dropping in here searching for "creation", and lo, all the fools assembled like flies. Hi fundamentalists! Read [2 Cor 3:6] and see how literal interpretation relates to Christianity. For non-fundamentalists and others: good work! Keep going! Said: Rursus () 07:02, 22 October 2008 (UTC)

No one takes every word literally. Not even fundamentalists. Remember: Jesus called Herod a fox (Luke 13:32). Now of course he didn't mean a literal furry animal with a long tail. However, the Bible is clear that the day in Genesis 1 is literally a 24-hour day. Second from last poster above: there are many prominent scientists who hold a young Earth view. Dr Raymond Damadian, Pioneer of MRI is one: http://www.answersingenesis.org/creation/v16/i3/science.asp Who are you going to believe: Man's theories or the Bible? —Preceding unsigned comment added by 71.231.60.42 (talk) 22:29, 25 October 2008 (UTC)

experiment

What equipment was used to make the experiment? VelociraptorBlade (talkcontribs) 04:13, 25 July 2008 (UTC)

Why do we mention formation of DNA/RNA at all ?

I see this as a strawman whereby we say that "Nucleic acids (DNA, RNA) themselves were not formed. ". Well obviously this is true given DNA/RNA need phosphorus and other precursors e.g. ribozyme. This is like discussing a hardware store and then commenting that we haven't found a car in the store. This line needs to be removed unless the intent of Miller-Urey was to create DNA/RNA, which I don't think it was at all else they would have had metals in the prebiotic mixture. Ttiotsw (talk) 01:11, 16 August 2008 (UTC)

I've removed the sentance, the rest of it still flows well. Aaronomus (talk) 23:13, 30 August 2008 (UTC)

Miller vs. Miller-Urey

I learned about this as "Miller's Experiment". There was no Urey in the texts I read, maybe back in the 80's. Is Urey revisionist? 70.22.154.184 (talk) 19:48, 27 August 2008 (UTC)