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by svachalek 1017 days ago
Single cell life appeared on Earth almost instantly after the planet cooled down enough to allow it. I don't think it's clear that any progress was being made over the next few billion years. One day the right mutation happened and boom, fancy life everywhere. With our data sample of one, I don't think it's clear if it was extraordinarily bad luck it took that long to happen, or extraordinarily good luck it ever happened at all.
1 comments

Eukaryotic cell is such a bonkers insane development, I definitely lean towards the impossibly lucky scenario. There was no need for that to be the origin story of a mitochondria like organelle (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symbiogenesis), but that's what we think we have.

That being said, there was an experiment (https://www.pnas.org/doi/full/10.1073/pnas.1115323109) which was able to select single cellular organisms to "become multicellular" in a rapid amount of time (<50 generations? been a while since I read it). Which says to me that, theoretically, the process is not hard, it just requires trillions of attemps to evoke something that works.

It not only has to work, the mutant has to have a fitness advantage over the nonmutant or it will drop out of the population before long. The vast majority of mutations are also “bad.”