The
above title is from (Ehrenvard,
1962),
discussed by (Williams,
1966).
Ehrenvard believes that life is probably older than organisms. He imagines a
stage at which every body of water could be thought of as a single diffuse
organism. His view has resonance with Darwin ’s
warm little pond which I discussed previously McLachlan (2010). The
origin of life is one of the most profound mysteries confronting science and rain
pools are the quintessential warm little ponds where life may have originated. Furthermore,
Strother and colleagues (Strother et al. 2011), present evidence that rain
pools and other puddles were the places where life first colonised land. More
specifically, the famous palaeontologist Alfred Sherwood Romer's theory
suggests that amphibians may have originated in rain pools and used them as a
base for the colonization of land (quoted by Dawkins 2004), p251. Thus these
humble and much overlooked habitats take on a significance which places them in
a new light.
Reference
Dawkins,
R. (2004). The Ancestor's Tale: A pilgrimage to the Dawn of Life. Weidenfeld and Nicholson. UK .
Ehrenvard,
G. (1962). Life: Its Origin and
Development. Minneopolis: Burgess.Williams, G. C. (1966). Adaptation and Natural Selection.
Princeton: Princeton University Press.
McLachlan, A. J. (2010). Life in the puddle. http://www.atholmclachlan.blogspot.com./
Strother, P. K., Battison, L., Brasier, M. D. and Wellman, C. H. (2011). Earth’s earliest non-marine eukaryotes. Nature, 473, 505-509.
McLachlan, A. J. (2010). Life in the puddle. http://www.atholmclachlan.blogspot.com./
Strother, P. K., Battison, L., Brasier, M. D. and Wellman, C. H. (2011). Earth’s earliest non-marine eukaryotes. Nature, 473, 505-509.