Definitions [6]
Abiogenesis is the concept that living organisms can arise naturally from non-living substances.
Autogenesis is another term for spontaneous generation, meaning self-origin of life from non-living matter.
The process of evolution of different species in a given geographical area starting from a point and literally radiating to other areas of geography (habitats) is called adaptive radiation.
The process where organisms with favorable variations survive and reproduce more successfully than others is called natural selection.
The concept where only well-adapted individuals survive in the struggle for existence is called survival of the fittest.
Define the following term:
Bipedalism
Bipedalism is a major type of locomotion that involves movement on two feet instead of four.
Theorems and Laws [1]
- Hardy–Weinberg’s principle states that allele frequencies in a population remain constant from generation to generation in the absence of evolutionary forces.
- The total collection of all alleles in a population is called the gene pool.
- Genetic equilibrium means no change in allele frequencies over time.
- If p is the frequency of dominant allele and q is the frequency of recessive allele, then
p + q = 1. - Genotype frequencies are expressed as:
p² (AA) + 2pq (Aa) + q² (aa) = 1. - Any deviation from Hardy–Weinberg equilibrium indicates that evolution is occurring.
- The principle helps in detecting the role of natural selection and other evolutionary forces.
Key Points
- Protobiogenesis - Origin of life on Earth; still unsolved despite advances in science.
- Special Creation - God/supernatural power created all life; no scientific proof.
- Panspermia (Cosmozoic) - Life came to Earth from other planets as spores; we can't explain the origin on those planets.
- Spontaneous Generation (Abiogenesis) - Life arose from non-living matter; disproved by Louis Pasteur.
- Biogenesis - Life always comes from pre-existing life (reproduction); can't explain the very first life on Earth.
- Purpose - Stanley Miller and Harold Urey provided the first experimental evidence in support of Oparin's chemical evolution theory.
- Apparatus - A sterilised and evacuated spark-discharge glass apparatus was used; CH₄, NH₃, and H₂ gases were pumped in the ratio 1:2:2 along with water vapour.
- Lightning Effect - Electric discharge carbon arc spark was used to mimic lightning; heating mantle and condenser simulated evaporation and precipitation.
- Result - After several days of continuous electric discharge, the gases interacted and condensed; the collected liquid turned brown and contained simple organic compounds like urea, amino acids, and lactic acid.
- Significance - The experiment strongly proved that simple molecules present in Earth's early atmosphere can combine to form organic building blocks of life.
- Adaptive Radiation - Process of evolution of different species starting from one point and radiating to other habitats in a given geographical area.
- Darwin's Finches - Best example of adaptive radiation; small birds observed by Darwin in the Galapagos Islands; originally migrated from the American mainland.
- How it Occurred - Original seed-eating birds adapted to different environmental conditions of different islands; evolved into many forms with altered beaks (e.g. insectivorous features).
- Australian Marsupials - Another example: many marsupial mammals in Australia evolved from a common ancestor through adaptive radiation.
- Significance - Provides strong evidence of evolution; shows how natural selection drives species diversification and the creation of new species from a single ancestor.
- Human evolution began from simple unicellular organisms, eventually giving rise to ape-like animals around 15–20 million years ago, during the late Miocene period.
- Carl Linnaeus classified modern man as Homo sapiens, under the order Primates, which includes monkeys and apes.
- Evolutionary changes such as bipedal locomotion, erect posture, increased brain size, reduced body hair, and the development of chin and forehead marked the shift from primitive apes to early humans.
- Fossil records—especially from Asia and Africa—reveal how early ape-like ancestors gradually evolved into gibbons, orangutans, gorillas, and eventually humans.
- Ramapithecus, an early ancestor known from jaw and tooth fossils, is considered a prehuman form that walked upright, initiating the journey toward modern humans.
Concepts [13]
- Universe and Earth's Formation
- Origin of Life on Earth
- Urey and Miller’s Experiment
- Evolution of Life Forms - a Theory
- Evidences Supporting the Theory of Evolution
- Adaptive Radiation
- Convergent Evolution
- Biological Evolution
- Theories of Biological Evolution
- Hardy Weinberg’s Principle
- Natural Selection and Speciation
- Brief Account of Evolution
- Human Evolution
