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  • {♫Intro♫}

  • For hundreds of years, “Are we alone in the universe?” has been the ultimate question

  • for science.

  • And while astronomers are busy searching for life beyond Earth, they've also started

  • asking another question:

  • If life seems so difficult to find, then why is our world so full of it?

  • One answer might be overhead right now: the Moon.

  • Moons are all over the solar systembigger ones and smaller onesbut there's something

  • unique about ours.

  • All of Jupiter's moons combined are just two hundredths of a percent as massive as

  • Jupiter.

  • A similar ratio holds for Saturn and Neptune's moons, while the Uranian and Martian moons

  • are even less massive compared to their planets.

  • In comparison, our single moon is a whopping 1.2% of the Earth's masswhich means its

  • effects aren't exactly subtle.

  • In particular, the Moon's gravity causes tides that affect huge swathes of the planet.

  • And while it's hard to know anything for sure when you're talking about billions

  • of years in the past, there are good reasons to suspect that those tides played a large

  • role in shaping life as we know it.

  • For one, tides likely played a key role in creating the basic conditions for life.

  • That's because tides don't just affect water.

  • Even though we think of tides as rising and falling ocean levels, tides actually affect

  • the entire surface of the Earth.

  • For example, New York City can rise and fall more than 35 centimeters in a day.

  • But while water can simply flow to its new shape every time the tides go up and down,

  • the Earth's crust is full of rock that twists and grinds on itself, creating friction that

  • releases heat.

  • Earth already gets a lot of heat from radioactive decay in the mantle, and all of this heat

  • helps move around the pieces of the crust we know as tectonic plates.

  • As these plates move around, creating earthquakes, volcanos, and new mountains, they also release

  • elements critical to life, like phosphorus, copper, and zinc, that come from the Earth's

  • mantle.

  • And as old land gets pulled back into the mantle, it traps the greenhouse gas carbon

  • dioxide underground, which helps keep the planet cool.

  • What's left is a delicate balance of temperature and nutrients that sets the stage for life

  • to arise.

  • And the tides may have had a role in that next step as well.

  • We don't know for sure how life got its start, but one of the most famous models describing

  • the origin of life is the primordial soup theory.

  • In this scenario, Earth's early oceans were full of the basic building blocks of life,

  • like amino acids.

  • Under just the right circumstances, a very lucky combination of these ingredients could

  • have created the first life.

  • In particular, that cocktail would have had to include one important ingredient—a way

  • of copying itself, or making more life from life.

  • Today's replicating molecules are DNA and RNA, and the backbone of these structures

  • is made of phosphate.

  • To make copies of genetic information, they have to come together and separate—a process

  • that's sometimes described as zipping and unzipping.

  • Early life likely had replicating molecules that worked similarly and were also made of

  • phosphate.

  • The catch is, in normal, low-salt ocean water, phosphates repel each other and block one

  • strand of phosphates from connecting to another.

  • But in water with higher concentrations of salt, that effect is neutralized.

  • Strands of phosphates can suddenly come together and replicate.

  • And the ebb and flow of the tides could have helped make that possible.

  • As the tides wash out, seawater gets trapped in tidepools where it can start to evaporate,

  • leaving behind its salt and creating an extra salty environment where the miracle of molecule

  • replication can occur.

  • Once life got startedhowever it didtides continued to shape its development.

  • Researchers debate whether tides would have helped stabilize or destabilize the Earth's

  • climate over time, but the one thing they agree on is that tides definitely would have

  • influenced it.

  • See, while tides might seem like a simple in-out motion from any one point on the shore,

  • their movement around the globe is actually pretty complex.

  • Tidal motion helps set up enormous ocean currents that can redistribute the equator's warm

  • water across the planet and have profound effects on the climate.

  • It's hard to predict exactly what happened in the past because the motion of tides and

  • currents depends a lot on the location of the continents and the shape of the ocean

  • floor,

  • Like, just the appearance of a strip of land connecting North and South Americathe Isthmus

  • of Panama—a few million years ago was enough to cut off circulation between the Atlantic

  • and Pacific Oceans and completely change the shape of ocean currents.

  • Because of that change, a new, Gulf Stream current started carrying warm water up north,

  • making Northern Europe as much as 10 degrees Celsius warmer than it used to be.

  • And there's no doubt that shifts in the climate, affected by the tides, drove much

  • of life's evolution.

  • Even today, tidal motion is increasing the melting of ice in the Arctic by carrying warmer

  • water up and under the sheets of sea ice.

  • Of course, Earth isn't the only place that experiences tides, and tides have actually

  • become a signpost in the search for life.

  • Tidal heating has created an ocean twice the size of Earth's under the surface of Jupiter's

  • moon Europa.

  • [en-SEHL-uh-duhs] And tides from Saturn inject enough heat into

  • its moon Enceladus to create giant geysers that shoot hundreds of kilometers into space.

  • Places like theserather than dry, dusty Marsmight be our best hope for life in

  • the solar system.

  • After all, if the tides helped get life started once, maybe it could happen again.

  • Thanks for watching this episode of SciShow Space!

  • And thanks to this month's President of Space, SR Foxley, for helping us bring you

  • this episode!

  • SR is one of our patrons on Patreon, and if you want to find out more about how to join

  • the amazing community of supporters who help make SciShow happen, you can find out more

  • at patreon.com/SciShow.

  • {♫Outro♫}

{♫Intro♫}

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