Life Out There: Expectations And Reality
We are in the age of the direct and indirect search for extraterrestrial life. The major question is: what are we looking for and to what extent can life on Earth provide an analogy for extraterrestrial life.
We will address these questions by examining the emergence of life and its evolution through geological time, based on consideration of the Earth as an exoplanet.
We conclude that, with the exception of a couple of hundred million years during the Great Oxydation Event 2.3-2.1 Ga, it would not have been possible for an extraterrestrial observer to detect traces of terrestrial life until the advent of planktonic eukaryotic algae after the Neoproterozoic Oxydation Event about 800 Ma.
Thus, for most of the history of life on Earth, there would be no externally observable evidence of its existence. We address the implications of this for the search for extraterrestrial life.
Life out there: expectations and reality, Proceedings of the International Astronomical Union (open access via PDF)
Astrobiology