“…Thus, one could imagine how chemical gradients could be sustained and how reactions and molecular sequestration in a relatively lowtemperature environment insulated from the turbulent conditions of the surface could operate [2]. On the early ocean floor, locations would have existed that channelled the exergonic products of serpentinization, locations where reduced minerals (mafic and ultramafic crust) were oxidized, and water and carbon dioxide were concomitantly reduced to hydrogen and methane [16,40]. From a chemical perspective, off-axis spring localities, where low-potential (reducing) electronic species are exhaled from the Earth, may have provided a portion of the necessary energy required for early hydrogenation reactions that were crucial in the accumulation of biologically relevant molecules and electronic equivalents at the origin of life [41,42].…”