Viewing Guide: Synthesis of Prebiotic Molecules in an Experimental Atmosphere
- What are the two hypotheses presented in the video?
- What are RNA and DNA?
- What were Stanley Miller and Harold Urey testing?
- What was the ‘oceanic compartment’?
- Why was the oceanic compartment heated?
- Which gasses were contained in the ‘atmospheric compartment?’
- Which gas, present in the atmosphere now, was NOT contained? (Not shown in video.)
- What were the electrical sparks meant to simulate?
- What do you think happened when the chemical gasses passed through the electrical sparks? Circle one.
- The sparks alone had no effect on the chemical gasses in the atmosphere.
- The sparks stimulated the formation of new compounds.
- What do the results of this experiment suggest?
- Why was ‘rain’ generated and tested?
- What was found in the mixture?
- What are amino acids, purines and pyrimidines?
Viewing Guide: Pasteur’s Experiment
- What was Pasteur’s procedure aimed at testing?
- What is meant by ‘microbial life’?
- What was Pasteur’s experimental set up?
- If left undisturbed, will the broth become cloudy with microbial growth?
- What is meant by the broth being ‘sterilized?’
- What did Pasteur do after the broth had been sterilized?
- What do you predict will happen to the flask on the left (the broken flask)?
- What was the difference between the two flasks in terms of dust? In terms of becoming contaminated?
- What is spontaneous generation?
- What did Pasteur conclude from his experiment?
Viewing Guide: Endosymbiosis
- Which organelles have features in common with whole cells?
- Name and describe two of the features mentioned.
- What kind of cells do mitochondria and chloroplasts resemble?
- What does mitochondria/chloroplast DNA have in common with prokaryotic DNA?
- How do the ribosomes in mitochondria/chloroplasts compare to prokaryotic ribosomes? To eukaryotic ribosomes?
- What was Lynn Margulis’ hypothesis about mitochondria and chloroplasts?
- According to the theory, how were prokaryotes introduced into eukaryotes?
- What could that prokaryote do, in terms of respiration?
- What advantage did this confer for the eukaryote?
- What is needed for aerobic respiration? What is produced?
- What then happened to the prokaryote and eukaryote?
- What organelles did those prokaryotes evolve into?
- What did some of the ‘primitive’ eukaryotes then acquire?
- What are cyanobacteria?
- What did the cell with mitochondria AND chloroplasts evolve into?
- What are two other pieces of evidence supporting endosymbiosis that are shown, but not directly stated, in the video?