The Earth's Atmosphere
The present atmosphere of the Earth is probably not its original
atmosphere. Our current atmosphere is what chemists would call an oxidizing
atmosphere, while the original atmosphere was what chemists would call
a reducing atmosphere. In particular, it probably did not contain
oxygen.
Composition of the Atmosphere
The original atmosphere may have been similar to the composition
of the solar nebula and close to the present composition of the Gas Giant planets,
though this depends on the details of how the planets condensed from the solar
nebula. That atmosphere was lost to space, and replaced by compounds outgassed
from the crust or (in some more recent theories) much of the atmosphere may
have come instead from the impacts of comets
and other planetesimals rich in volatile materials.
The oxygen so characteristic of our atmosphere was almost
all produced by plants (cyanobacteria
or, more colloquially, blue-green algae). Thus, the present composition of
the atmosphere is 79% nitrogen, 20% oxygen, and 1% other gases.