Messy Chemistry and the Emergence of Life


Journal article


A. Vázquez-Salazar, Ranajay Saha
Life, 2026

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APA   Click to copy
Vázquez-Salazar, A., & Saha, R. (2026). Messy Chemistry and the Emergence of Life. Life.


Chicago/Turabian   Click to copy
Vázquez-Salazar, A., and Ranajay Saha. “Messy Chemistry and the Emergence of Life.” Life (2026).


MLA   Click to copy
Vázquez-Salazar, A., and Ranajay Saha. “Messy Chemistry and the Emergence of Life.” Life, 2026.


BibTeX   Click to copy

@article{a2026a,
  title = {Messy Chemistry and the Emergence of Life},
  year = {2026},
  journal = {Life},
  author = {Vázquez-Salazar, A. and Saha, Ranajay}
}

Abstract

Chemical complexity is not a nuisance to be minimized in origin of life research, it is an enabling condition. This second edition of the Special Issue on the Origin of Life in Chemically Complex Messy Environments gathers contributions that embrace multicomponent mixtures, dynamic geochemical settings, and nonequilibrium processes. The papers collected here survey surface hydrothermal routes to reactive nitriles, groundwater evolution of alkaline lakes, and transition metal sulfide-driven amino acid and amide formation without cyanide. They report one pot nucleoside and nucleotide synthesis from formamide over cerium phosphate, review non aqueous organophosphorus pathways, and probe peptide rich mixtures and formose type networks under serpentinization associated minerals. The issue also advances conceptual frameworks, including atmospheric photochemical signatures for biosignature discrimination, the role of chiral mineral surfaces in enantioseparation, and computational simulations of the origin of LUCA. Together, these studies position messy chemistry as a crucible that turns chemical diversity and environmental heterogeneity into routes toward organization and function.



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