How did oxygen become such a major component of the current atmosphere?

1 Answer
Nov 8, 2015

The first single cell organisms used photosynthesis for energy, and oxygen, one of the byproducts of photosynthesis, was released into the atmosphere in abundance.

Explanation:

Oxygen has always been around in our atmosphere, however, since it reacts so readily, it started out as mostly carbon dioxide, CO2. When we talk about atmospheric oxygen, mostly we refer to diatomic oxygen, O2. In order to increase the concentration of O2 we just need a way to pull the carbon atom out of the CO2 molecules.

It turns out that photosynthesis does exactly that. During photosynthesis, CO2 and water, H2O react with light to form glucose and O2. Here's a deeper explanation of photosynthesis.

Photosynthesis equation;
6CO2+6H2OC6H12O6+6O2

Looking at the chemical equation above, we can see that carbon atoms are pulled off the CO2 molecules and added to the water molecules to form glucose. The O2 is then released into the atmosphere.

Today, those O2 molecules are used by animals during respiration to release energy. The formula is the opposite of photosynthesis, and converts glocose and oxygen into CO2 and water.

Respiration;
C6H12O6+6O26CO2+6H2O

Before there were animals, however, the O2 was free to build up in the atmosphere, so as the amount of CO2 decreased, the O2 increased, and the atmosphere became oxygen rich.

During the Archaean Era, about 3.5 billion years ago, the first single celled organisms began photosynthesizing. These cyanobacteria pumped out tons of oxygen into the atmosphere.