Earth had enough oxygen to start life ‘400mn yrs earlier than thought’
November 12th, 2010 - 2:16 pm ICT by ANILondon, Nov 12 (ANI): Scientists have found that oxygen had reached a level where it could have supported life much earlier than thought - 400 million years further back in time.
The evidence is found in 1.2-billion-year-old rocks from Scotland, which show signatures of bacterial activity known to occur when there is copious atmospheric oxygen.
This is not to say that complex life existed 1.2 billion years ago, merely that the conditions would have been right for it to start to take hold.
“We’re recording a key stage in the evolution of life on Earth. The evidence relates to a particular group of microbes that have been very successful through Earth’s history and are now found everywhere from glaciers to the deep ocean floor,” the BBC quoted Professor John Parnell from the University of Aberdeen as saying.
“These microbes made an important advance by becoming more efficient, which they did through using oxygen in their environment. So the occurrence of these microbes is a marker for increasing oxygen in the atmosphere,” he added.
The researchers do not see the fossil evidence of the microbes themselves - only the chemical traces that they were present and using sulphur in the lake floor as a form of energy.
“There’s a certain stage which is achieved by bacteria when they start to work in a more complex way, and they do this by forming a community where some bacteria are turning sulphate into sulphide and there’s another lot of bacteria turning the sulphide back to sulphate,” explained Parnell.
“What we are now showing is that the conditions in the atmosphere were in place [1.2 billion years ago], so it probably needed some other factor to trigger the early evolution of complex life and the fact that the Ediacaran fauna occur after the ’snowball Earth’ episode suggests those two are linked somehow,” he said. (ANI)
- Rare sulphur could rewrite theories of early Earth - Feb 26, 2011
- 'Bolt from deep blue' may have sparked life on Earth - Oct 30, 2010
- Hot springs of volcanic crater in Siberia reveals ancient ecology - Apr 27, 2011
- Oxygen breathing bugs older than thought - Oct 20, 2011
- Mud stirred up by sea worms lead to sulphate hike in oceans 500 mln yrs ago - May 19, 2009
- Modern-day genomes used to reconstruct evolution of 3bn-yr-old microbes - Dec 20, 2010
- Meteorites could have kick-started life on earth 4 billion years ago - Mar 11, 2010
- Oxygen production began in Earth's oceans 100 mln yrs earlier than believed - Oct 30, 2009
- How volcanoes snuffed out ocean life 100 million years ago - Feb 01, 2010
- Climatic conditions on early earth similar to current ones - Dec 01, 2011
- Scientists recreate billion-year-old enzyme - Nov 01, 2011
- 635mn-yr-old seaweed fossils in China tell story of oxygen in ancient ocean - Feb 17, 2011
- Arsenic Bacteria Heralds New Era In Search For Life - Dec 05, 2010
- Two-billion-year-old macrofossils discovered in West Africa - Jul 01, 2010
- Garlic beats antibiotics in quelling food-borne illness - May 04, 2012
Tags: atmospheric oxygen, bacteria, deep ocean, ediacaran fauna, evolution of life, evolution of life on earth, fossil evidence, glaciers, john parnell, life on earth, marker, microbes, million years, ocean floor, old rocks, professor john, snowball earth, sulphide, sulphur, university of aberdeen