Style1½ inches thick (3.75 cm) Product Details Artist grade canvas, archival inks, wooden stretcher bars, and UVB protective coating
AvailablityUsually ships within five business days. ArtistEmily Colosimo Platinum Member CollectionFineArt
Description Among the several theories on the origin of molecules one of them was about cells replicating in deep sea vents creating life on Earth. Here is a cartoon concept showing the emergence of Miss Cell meeting Mr. Cell over 3 billion years ago. Our ancestors! Based on the Gunter Wachtershauser theory regarding iron-sulfur life might have originated at hydrothermal vents. He proposed that an early form of metabolism predated genetics. It was chemistry or love at first site that created the reaction that released energy in a form of heat that harnessed their relationship. It begs one to differ whether the origin of love is formed by a chemical reaction or does it just happen. It's proposed that amino-acid synthesis perhaps occurring beneath the Earth have blasted up to the surface with their hydrothermal fluids into cooler waters, where the low temperatures and clay minerals helped to form peptides and protocols. This is an attraction brought on by an abundance of methane and ammonia present in hydrothermal vent regions non existent in the Earth's primitive atmosphere. High temperatures would have lessoned the chances of these molecules to survive (or as I refer to as temperament) but some have suggested that life would have originated outside the zones of highest temperature. There are numerous species of extremophiles and other organisms currently living immediately around deep-sea vents, suggesting that this is indeed a possible scenario.
Emily Colosimo, Toronto Member Since July 2012 Artist Statement Emily grew up in a Canadian Italian Family where her mother was a talented seamstress/pattern designer and her father's hobby was redesigning cars. Her dad once envisioned an alternative fuel vehicle over 40 years ago. All of her siblings inherited much of their talents. Her first artwork was a lighthouse drawn when she was 4 years old. From that point on she was destined to become an architect. Sketching, painting and currently digital artwork has become her passive leisure. From Landscape Architect to Advertising Art Director Emily uses her artistic tools to envision her ideas.