What was the experiment of Stanley Miller (1953) on the origin of life?
In 1953 Stanley Miller arranged an experimental apparatus that simulated the atmospheric conditions of the primitive earth. The experiment contained a mixture of methane, ammonia, hydrogen and circulating water that when heated was transformed into vapor. He submitted the mixture to continuous bombardment of electrical discharge and after days obtained a liquid residual within which he discovered organic molecules and among them surprisingly the amino acids glycine and alanine, the most abundant constituents of proteins. Other researchers reproduced the Miller experiment and noted also the formation of other organic molecules such as lipids, carbohydrates and nucleotides.