Neutron-capture products, such as molybdenum (Mo) isotopes, are an important tool that cosmochemists use to constrain the stellar precursors of the Solar System and, potentially, the origin of life on Earth. Using high-precision Mo isotope data from meteorites and terrestrial samples, studies have attempted to reconstruct Earth’s formation by linking its composition to material sourced from various heliocentric distances. Debate, however, persists about the nature of Earth’s late-stage building blocks that accreted around the time the Moon formed and whether they delivered life-essential elements (i.e., carbon, hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen, phosphorus, and sulfur; CHNOPS), which are presumed to be more prevalent in the outer Solar System. Initially, it was proposed that the Moon-forming event involved the addition of material from both the inner and outer Solar System, thereby providing a mechanism for the delivery of a significant portion of life-bearing elements late in Earth’s formation. Recent advancements in analytical chemistry and their application to a wider range of samples than previously studied, however, led to a revised constraint: the Moon-forming event was dominated by inner Solar System material that was less enriched in CHNOPS, thereby relaxing the requirement for the delivery of a consequential amount of life-bearing elements late in Earth’s formation. A review of analytical approaches and findings is presented here to highlight the utility of neutron-capture products in constraining the origin of life on Earth.
Bermingham et al. (Tue,) studied this question.