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Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - NEET MCQ


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15 Questions MCQ Test Biology Class 12 - Test: Origin of Life (NCERT)

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Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 1

Which one of the following experiments suggests that simplest living organisms could not have originated spontaneously from non-living matter?

Detailed Solution for Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 1

Meat was not spoiled when heated and kept in sealed vessel suggests that simples living organisms could not have originated spontaneously from non-living matter.

Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 2

According to one of the most widely accepted theories, earth's atmosphere before origin of life was

Detailed Solution for Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 2

The atmosphere of earth before origin of life was strongly reducing (without free oxygen). At high temperature, free atoms combined to form molecules and simple inorganic compounds. Hydrogen, oxygen, carbon and nitrogen could not exist in free state and thus combined variously either among themselves or like CH4, NH3, H2 and H2O vapour.

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Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 3

From the point of view of early chemical evolution that preceded the origin of life on earth, the most important simple organic molecules formed were

Detailed Solution for Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 3

The early inorganic molecules interacted and produced simple organic molecules such as simple sugars (e.g., ribose, deoxyribose, glucose, etc.), nitrogenous bases (e.g., purines, pyrmidines), amino acids, glycerol, fatty acids, etc.
CH4+CO2+H2O→ Sugars + Glycerol + Fatty acids
CH4+HCN+NH3+H2O→ Purines + pyrimidines
CH4+NH3+CO2+H2O→ Amino acids

Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 4

Who proposed that the first form of life could have come from pre-existing nonliving organic molecules?

Detailed Solution for Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 4

According to Oparin-Haldane theory, life originated through bio-chemical processes of atoms that combined to form molecules. Molecules in turn reacted to produce inorganic and organic compounds. Organic compounds interacted to produce all types of macromolecules which organised to form the first form of life or cells.

Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 5

The prebiotic atmosphere of the earth was of a reducing nature. It was transformed into an oxidising atmosphere of present day due to the emergence of

Detailed Solution for Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 5

The prebiotic atmosphere of the earth was of a reducing nature, i.e., no free oxygen was available. It was transformed into an oxidising atmosphere due to the emergence of cyanobacteria. They used water to get hydrogen and released oxygen into the atmosphere.

Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 6

In the experiment in given diagram which of the following groups of gases were used to simulate primitive atmosphere?

Detailed Solution for Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 6

Stanley Miller in 1953 took an air tight apparatus and circulated four gases - CH4, NH3, H2 and water vapour through it. He passed electrical discharges from electrodes at 800C. Then he passed the mixture through a condenser He performed this experiment continuously in this way for a week and analysed the composition of the liquid inside the apparatus. He found a large number of simple organic compounds including some amino acids such as alanine, glycine and aspartic acid. Miller, thus, proved that organic compounds were basis of life.

Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 7

First life form on earth was a

Detailed Solution for Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 7

It is presumed that the first living organisms were chemoheterotrophs that obtained energy by the fermentation of complex organic substances available to them from the sea broth. They were anaerobes.

Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 8

According to Oparin, which one of the following was not present in the primitive atmosphere of the earth?

Detailed Solution for Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 8

According to Oparin, the atmosphere of primitive earth was reducing because H atoms were most numerous and most reactive. Large quantities of H2,N2 water vapour, CO2,CH4 and NH3 were present but free oxygen was not present in significant amount.

Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 9

One of the possible early sources of energy was/were

Detailed Solution for Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 9

The energy requiring synthetic processes, that occurred on primitive earth obtained energy from the sun, violent electric discharges like lightning, heat produced from volcanic eruptions and ionizing radiations like X-rays, etc.

Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 10

The following are some major events in the early history of life
P. First heterotrophic prokaryotes
Q. First genes
R. First eukaryotes
S. First autotrophic prokaryotes
T. First animals
Which option below places these events in the correct order?

Detailed Solution for Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 10

Organisms have evolved from simpler forms to complex form. Hence the order of the events are genes first, then heterotrophic prokaryotes, then autotrophic prokaryotes, then eukaryotes and then animals.

Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 11

The first life originated

Detailed Solution for Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 11

Since many simpler and lower animals are aquatic and marine, and as the cells and body fluids of all animals contain salts, it is inferred that life originated in ocean (water).

Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 12

Abiogenesis theory of origin supports

Detailed Solution for Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 12

Abiogenesis theory of origin states that life originated from non-living things in a spontaneous manner. This theory was supported by early Greek philosophers. In ancient Egypt, it was believed that the mud of the Nile river could give rise to frogs, snakes, mice and even crocodiles when warmed by the sun. Van Helmont believed that human sweat and wheat grains could given rise to organisms.
So, the correct answer is 'Spontaneous generation'.

Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 13

Coacervates are

Detailed Solution for Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 13

Oparin observed that if a mixture of a large protein and a polysaccharide is shaken, coacervates form. The interiors, which are primarily protein and polysaccharides, with some water, become separated from the surrounding aqueous solution.

Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 14

Early atmosphere contained methane and other hydrocarbons. They have been now replaced by

Detailed Solution for Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 14

The primitive atmosphere of earth was reducing atmosphere that lack molecular oxygen but was rich in water vapour, carbon monoxide, carbon dioxide, nitrogen and hydrogen. Absence of oxygen and various high energy sources (UV rays, high temperature and lightening) allowed chemical reaction hydrogen and carbon to produce methane and other hydrocarbons. In absence of oxygen and presence of high temperature methane was present in unspoiled gaseous form and facilitated further chemical reactions to produce more complex protein structures. With origin of photoautotrophs, the organisms that use light as source of energy and carbon dioxide as chief carbon source, earth’s atmosphere II was replaced with atmosphere III. These photoautotrophs use water as electron donor during photophosphorylation that results in production of oxygen thereby adding oxygen to otherwise primitive reducing atmosphere. Photoautotrophs were the source of oxygen. Presence of molecular oxygen oxidized the reduced methane and other hydrocarbons into carbon dioxide.

Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 15

Theory of spontaneous generation was rejected because:

Detailed Solution for Test: Origin of Life (NCERT) - Question 15
  • Louis Pasteur by careful experimentation demonstrated that life comes only from pre existing life.
  • He showed that in pre sterilised flasks, life did not come from killed yeast while in another flask open to air, new living organisms arose from ‘killed yeast’.
  • Spontaneous generation theory was dismissed once and for all.
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