Weird Harold wrote:JohnRoth wrote:The biggest issue that none of these proposals deal with is that, in a pre-oxygen environment, there are a huge number of oxygen sinks, such as reduced iron, which will promptly absorb all the oxygen you can produce.
If we're processing ocean water or pulverizing surface oxides aren't the "O2 Sinks" already full? As long as we deal with the recombination problem -- eg keep separate elements separate and dispose of the waste portion -- aren't we simply drawing from stored Oxygen?
That's two different questions. First, Earth had lots of water before oxygenation started, and the oxygen sinks (that is, reduced iron and lots of etceteras), weren't full. In fact, a lot of "how life started" scenarios assume large quantities of dissolved iron in the ocean. In other words, the existing oxygen is pretty much locked up in the water to start with.
The second question assumes starting with lots of oxides. That's a fundamentally different set of assumptions. I don't know how you'd get a planet like that to start with, which doesn't mean that it might not exist.
Weird Harold wrote:The problem with real-world oxygenation as an example is that process started from a theoretical single first mutated algae cell. Terraforming won't start with one algae cell or one grass seed or one genie-coral polyp, it will start from a point a couple of billion years of cell division advanced from that theoretical first single mutation.
We don't know when the first cells arose that started releasing oxygen. What we (that is, geologists) know is when there started to be enough oxygen for detectable amounts of oxides to be deposited. That takes a lot more than a single cell.
Weird Harold wrote:Terraforming through the biosphere won't happen in 30 years, but I would not seriously expect it to take 2.6 billion years either.
That's arm waving. Our single example provides no support for it being able to take substantially less.