Chemist for Re-Colonization

Why does everybody always seem to forget the chemistry of evolution? Shells and plates require complex processes to turn calcium carbonate from the sea into shells on the backs of animals. The "Oxygen Revolution" changed life on Earth, allowing higher metabolism (Krebs Cycle) and wiping out life forms to create open niches. Nitrogen and phosphate also contribute to evolution because they allow animals to diversify and grow. DNA changes can’t be ignored either, nor can the switch to heterotrophic feeding that allowed animals to grow in volume instead of spreading out for yet more surface area. And we haven’t even begun to talk about the way the organisms themselves affect their chemical environment and how that environment then affects the organisms. P-L5 seemed like a simple chemical equation--control the reactants in the environments and you control the organisms that are produced. To convince the judges to re-colonize you will have to explain the chemical theories of evolution and the "Cambrian Explosion" and how you would limit them. Good luck!

Leads and Sources

Magazines and Articles:

"When Life Exploded," J. Madeleine Nash. Cover Story Time Magazine December 4, 1995.
"On Embryos and Ancestors," Stephen Jay Gould. Natural History 7/98-8/98, p. 20.
"The Evolution of Life on the Earth," Stephen Jay Gould. Scientific American October 1994, p. 85.
"Breathing Room for Early Animals" (Oxygen), Andrew H. Knoll. Nature Vol. 382, July 11, 1996, p. 111.
"The Big Bang of Animal Evolution," Jeffrey Levinton. Scientific American November 1992.
"Hypersea," Dianna and Mark McMenamin. Discover October 1995, p. 76.
"The Emergence of Animals," Mark McMenamin, Scientific American April 1987, p. 94.
"Life’s Grand Explosions." (theories on why the Cambrian explosion occurred), Lori Oliwenstein. Discover January 1996, p. 42.
"The Molecular Explosion," Henry Gee. Nature Vol. 373, February 16,1995, p. 558.

Internet Sites:

The Divisions of Precambrian Time
http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/precambrian/precambrian.html

Life of the Vendian
http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/vendian/vendianlife.html

Learning About the Vendian Animals
http://www.ucmp.berkeley.edu/vendian/critters.html

Oxygen Pulse and the Evolutionary Expansion of the Metazoans
http://www.geocities.com/CapeCanaveral/Hangar/8200/Oxygenation.html

Cambrian Explosion
http://www.carleton.ca/Museum/camex/1ahome.html

Books:

The Emergence of Animals: The Cambrian Breakthrough. Mark and Dianna McMenamin, 1990, Columbia University Press.
Biology: The Science of Life. Wallace, Sanders and Ferl, 4th ed., 1996, Addison-Wesley.