WEBVTT 00:00:01.123 --> 00:00:05.872 The Earth is 4.6 billion years old, 00:00:05.896 --> 00:00:10.597 but a human lifetime often lasts for less than 100 years. 00:00:11.191 --> 00:00:14.508 So why care about the history of our planet 00:00:14.532 --> 00:00:20.389 when the distant past seems so inconsequential to everyday life? 00:00:20.849 --> 00:00:22.967 You see, as far as we can tell, 00:00:22.991 --> 00:00:26.226 Earth is the only planet in our solar system 00:00:26.250 --> 00:00:28.759 known to have sparked life, 00:00:28.783 --> 00:00:34.182 and the only system able to provide life support for human beings. NOTE Paragraph 00:00:34.763 --> 00:00:36.016 So why Earth? 00:00:36.731 --> 00:00:40.109 We know Earth is unique for having plate tectonics, 00:00:40.133 --> 00:00:41.686 liquid water on its surface 00:00:41.710 --> 00:00:43.987 and an oxygen-rich atmosphere. 00:00:44.457 --> 00:00:46.775 But this has not always been the case, 00:00:46.799 --> 00:00:51.640 and we know this because ancient rocks have recorded the pivotal moments 00:00:51.664 --> 00:00:54.474 in Earth's planetary evolution. 00:00:55.653 --> 00:00:58.636 And one of the best places to observe those ancient rocks 00:00:58.660 --> 00:01:02.133 is in the Pilbara of Western Australia. 00:01:03.494 --> 00:01:07.994 The rocks here are 3.5 billion years old, 00:01:08.018 --> 00:01:12.624 and they contain some of the oldest evidence for life on the planet. NOTE Paragraph 00:01:13.298 --> 00:01:15.713 Now, often when we think of early life, 00:01:15.737 --> 00:01:18.955 we might imagine a stegosaurus 00:01:18.979 --> 00:01:22.408 or maybe a fish crawling onto land. 00:01:23.012 --> 00:01:25.240 But the early life that I'm talking about 00:01:25.264 --> 00:01:29.189 is simple microscopic life, like bacteria. 00:01:29.745 --> 00:01:33.730 And their fossils are often preserved as layered rock structures, 00:01:33.754 --> 00:01:35.888 called stromatolites. 00:01:36.515 --> 00:01:41.482 This simple form of life is almost all we see in the fossil record 00:01:41.506 --> 00:01:45.637 for the first three billion years of life on Earth. 00:01:46.256 --> 00:01:49.711 Our species can only be traced back in the fossil record 00:01:49.735 --> 00:01:52.243 to a few hundred thousand years ago. 00:01:52.267 --> 00:01:54.232 We know from the fossil record, 00:01:54.256 --> 00:01:58.306 bacteria life had grabbed a strong foothold 00:01:58.330 --> 00:02:01.706 by about 3.5 to four billion years ago. 00:02:02.316 --> 00:02:05.955 The rocks older than this have been either destroyed 00:02:05.979 --> 00:02:09.110 or highly deformed through plate tectonics. 00:02:09.550 --> 00:02:11.987 So what remains a missing piece of the puzzle 00:02:12.011 --> 00:02:16.975 is exactly when and how life on Earth began. 00:02:19.086 --> 00:02:22.662 Here again is that ancient volcanic landscape in the Pilbara. 00:02:23.075 --> 00:02:27.902 Little did I know that our research here would provide another clue 00:02:27.926 --> 00:02:30.291 to that origin-of-life puzzle. NOTE Paragraph 00:02:30.871 --> 00:02:32.981 It was on my first field trip here, 00:02:33.005 --> 00:02:37.150 toward the end of a full, long week mapping project, 00:02:37.174 --> 00:02:40.161 that I came across something rather special. 00:02:41.026 --> 00:02:44.633 Now, what probably looks like a bunch of wrinkly old rocks 00:02:44.657 --> 00:02:46.670 are actually stromatolites. 00:02:46.694 --> 00:02:50.821 And at the center of this mound was a small, peculiar rock 00:02:50.845 --> 00:02:53.523 about the size of a child's hand. 00:02:54.144 --> 00:02:59.042 It took six months before we inspected this rock under a microscope, 00:02:59.066 --> 00:03:01.682 when one of my mentors at the time, Malcolm Walter, 00:03:01.706 --> 00:03:05.566 suggested the rock resembled geyserite. 00:03:06.034 --> 00:03:09.542 Geyserite is a rock type that only forms 00:03:09.566 --> 00:03:13.694 in and around the edges of hot spring pools. NOTE Paragraph 00:03:14.165 --> 00:03:17.647 Now, in order for you to understand the significance of geyserite, 00:03:17.671 --> 00:03:21.822 I need to take you back a couple of centuries. 00:03:23.464 --> 00:03:27.516 In 1871, in a letter to his friend Joseph Hooker, 00:03:27.540 --> 00:03:29.346 Charles Darwin suggested: 00:03:30.183 --> 00:03:33.904 "What if life started in some warm little pond 00:03:33.928 --> 00:03:36.047 with all sort of chemicals 00:03:36.071 --> 00:03:40.343 still ready to undergo more complex changes?" NOTE Paragraph 00:03:40.883 --> 00:03:43.966 Well, we know of warm little ponds. We call them "hot springs." 00:03:43.990 --> 00:03:46.320 In these environments, you have hot water 00:03:46.344 --> 00:03:49.359 dissolving minerals from the underlying rocks. 00:03:50.295 --> 00:03:55.354 This solution mixes with organic compounds 00:03:55.378 --> 00:03:58.009 and results in a kind of chemical factory, 00:03:58.033 --> 00:04:04.023 which researchers have shown can manufacture simple cellular structures 00:04:04.047 --> 00:04:07.339 that are the first steps toward life. NOTE Paragraph 00:04:07.363 --> 00:04:09.621 But 100 years after Darwin's letter, 00:04:09.645 --> 00:04:13.820 deep-sea hydrothermal vents, or hot vents, were discovered in the ocean. 00:04:13.844 --> 00:04:16.153 And these are also chemical factories. 00:04:16.177 --> 00:04:19.727 This one is located along the Tonga volcanic arc, 00:04:19.751 --> 00:04:24.252 1,100 meters below sea level in the Pacific Ocean. 00:04:25.560 --> 00:04:29.258 The black smoke that you see billowing out of these chimneylike structures 00:04:29.282 --> 00:04:31.099 is also mineral-rich fluid, 00:04:31.123 --> 00:04:34.015 which is being fed off by bacteria. 00:04:34.967 --> 00:04:37.235 And since the discovery of these deep-sea vents, 00:04:37.259 --> 00:04:41.516 the favored scenario for an origin of life has been in the ocean. 00:04:42.091 --> 00:04:43.674 And this is for good reason: 00:04:45.118 --> 00:04:48.427 deep-sea vents are well-known in the ancient rock record, 00:04:48.451 --> 00:04:51.516 and it's thought that the early Earth had a global ocean 00:04:51.540 --> 00:04:54.292 and very little land surface. 00:04:54.316 --> 00:04:59.021 So the probability that deep-sea vents were abundant on the very early Earth 00:04:59.045 --> 00:05:01.524 fits well with an origin of life 00:05:01.548 --> 00:05:02.828 in the ocean. NOTE Paragraph 00:05:04.233 --> 00:05:05.383 However ... 00:05:06.503 --> 00:05:10.657 our research in the Pilbara provides and supports 00:05:10.681 --> 00:05:12.943 an alternative perspective. 00:05:13.590 --> 00:05:19.489 After three years, finally, we were able to show that, in fact, 00:05:19.513 --> 00:05:22.891 our little rock was geyserite. 00:05:22.915 --> 00:05:26.984 So this conclusion suggested not only did hot springs exist 00:05:27.008 --> 00:05:31.064 in our 3.5 billion-year-old volcano in the Pilbara, 00:05:31.088 --> 00:05:37.446 but it pushed back evidence for life living on land in hot springs 00:05:37.470 --> 00:05:39.709 in the geological record of Earth 00:05:39.733 --> 00:05:43.641 by three billion years. 00:05:44.818 --> 00:05:48.242 And so, from a geological perspective, 00:05:48.266 --> 00:05:55.116 Darwin's warm little pond is a reasonable origin-of-life candidate. NOTE Paragraph 00:05:57.174 --> 00:06:00.741 Of course, it's still debatable how life began on Earth, 00:06:00.765 --> 00:06:03.223 and it probably always will be. 00:06:03.247 --> 00:06:05.803 But it is clear that it's flourished; 00:06:05.827 --> 00:06:07.187 it has diversified, 00:06:07.211 --> 00:06:09.737 and it has become ever more complex. 00:06:09.761 --> 00:06:13.083 Eventually, it reached the age of the human, 00:06:13.107 --> 00:06:16.733 a species that has begun to question its own existence 00:06:16.757 --> 00:06:19.619 and the existence of life elsewhere: 00:06:20.595 --> 00:06:23.732 Is there a cosmic community waiting to connect with us, 00:06:23.756 --> 00:06:26.159 or are we all there is? NOTE Paragraph 00:06:26.876 --> 00:06:31.364 A clue to this puzzle again comes from the ancient rock record. 00:06:32.316 --> 00:06:34.576 At about 2.5 billion years ago, 00:06:34.600 --> 00:06:39.447 there is evidence that bacteria had begun to produce oxygen, 00:06:39.471 --> 00:06:41.740 kind of like plants do today. 00:06:41.764 --> 00:06:44.235 Geologists refer to the period that followed 00:06:44.259 --> 00:06:46.921 as the Great Oxidation Event. 00:06:47.436 --> 00:06:52.094 It is implied from rocks called banded iron formations, 00:06:52.118 --> 00:06:57.258 many of which can be observed as hundreds-of-meter-thick packages of rock 00:06:57.282 --> 00:06:59.443 which are exposed in gorges 00:06:59.467 --> 00:07:02.837 that carve their way through the Karijini National Park 00:07:02.861 --> 00:07:04.620 in Western Australia. 00:07:05.160 --> 00:07:09.527 The arrival of free oxygen allowed two major changes to occur on our planet. NOTE Paragraph 00:07:09.551 --> 00:07:13.041 First, it allowed complex life to evolve. 00:07:13.065 --> 00:07:17.015 You see, life needs oxygen to get big and complex. 00:07:17.730 --> 00:07:20.744 And it produced the ozone layer, which protects modern life 00:07:20.768 --> 00:07:24.337 from the harmful effects of the sun's UVB radiation. 00:07:24.837 --> 00:07:29.798 So in an ironic twist, microbial life made way for complex life, 00:07:29.822 --> 00:07:33.455 and in essence, relinquished its three-billion-year reign 00:07:33.479 --> 00:07:34.653 over the planet. 00:07:35.161 --> 00:07:38.755 Today, we humans dig up fossilized complex life 00:07:38.779 --> 00:07:40.241 and burn it for fuel. 00:07:41.154 --> 00:07:45.543 This practice pumps vast amounts of carbon dioxide into the atmosphere, 00:07:45.567 --> 00:07:48.018 and like our microbial predecessors, 00:07:48.042 --> 00:07:51.484 we have begun to make substantial changes to our planet. 00:07:52.889 --> 00:07:56.558 And the effects of those are encompassed by global warming. NOTE Paragraph 00:07:58.793 --> 00:08:03.967 Unfortunately, the ironic twist here could see the demise of humanity. 00:08:04.420 --> 00:08:08.379 And so maybe the reason we aren't connecting with life elsewhere, 00:08:08.403 --> 00:08:10.436 intelligent life elsewhere, 00:08:10.460 --> 00:08:12.543 is that once it evolves, 00:08:12.567 --> 00:08:15.314 it extinguishes itself quickly. NOTE Paragraph 00:08:16.153 --> 00:08:18.054 If the rocks could talk, 00:08:18.078 --> 00:08:21.100 I suspect they might say this: 00:08:22.345 --> 00:08:25.189 life on Earth is precious. 00:08:26.697 --> 00:08:31.084 It is the product of four or so billion years 00:08:31.108 --> 00:08:35.812 of a delicate and complex co-evolution 00:08:35.836 --> 00:08:38.349 between life and Earth, 00:08:38.373 --> 00:08:43.657 of which humans only represent the very last speck of time. 00:08:45.473 --> 00:08:49.741 You can use this information as a guide or a forecast -- 00:08:49.765 --> 00:08:54.964 or an explanation as to why it seems so lonely in this part of the galaxy. 00:08:56.629 --> 00:09:00.318 But use it to gain some perspective 00:09:01.166 --> 00:09:05.918 about the legacy that you want to leave behind 00:09:05.942 --> 00:09:10.591 on the planet that you call home. NOTE Paragraph 00:09:12.083 --> 00:09:13.332 Thank you. NOTE Paragraph 00:09:13.356 --> 00:09:16.896 (Applause)