This was the liquid present on the surface of the earth before life started. It was water, with various chemicals dissolved in it.
they were formed from the primordial soup
It refers to liquid and chemical mixture from which life on Earth began. Biologists also call it the primordial soup, or the primordial sea.
The Bubble Model.
Long ago some scientists think living things came from a primordial soup.
Oparin's primordial soup hypothesis was tested through experiments simulating the conditions of early Earth, where simple organic molecules were created using energy sources like heat, light, or electricity. These experiments showed that the basic building blocks of life, such as amino acids and sugars, could be formed under these conditions, supporting Oparin's idea that life could have originated from a primordial soup of organic molecules.
The primordial soup contained several things, none of which are fully understood. Some scientists theorize it was made up of earthly thorium, carbon, and sulphur, some also feel that stellar gas, and rare isotope 54643 was present, when lightning stuck this soup of origin, several things came out, some of them were, jinn, dolphins, unicorns, goblins, King Solomon, Squids, Gypsies, and Chuck Norris. They must be constantly regenerated by stellar radiation in case of carbon and tritium, or geochemical transmutation will occur, resulting in the scriptural end times.
hydrocyanic acid, formic acid, acetic acid, lactic acid
The primordial soup theory and model suggested the ancient conditions and chemistry of early Earth's seas created the organic materials. These compounds served as the building blocks towards the first self replicating molecules and protolife.
The theory that life evolved from a "primordial soup" of amino acids that began to form the basic proteins that make up living cells. Some speculate that an electric charge may have "jump-started" the chemical reaction.
Peanut Butter
The correct spelling for the dish is cold cream potato soup. Also known as vichyssoise.
primordial