Japan Times - Reuters
The experts found tiny humps, between 1 and 4 cm (0.4 and 1.6 inches)
tall, in rocks at Isua in southwest Greenland that they said were
fossilised groups of microbes similar to ones now found in seas from
Bermuda to Australia.
If confirmed as fossilised communities of bacteria known as
stromatolites — rather than a freak natural formation — the lumps would
predate fossils found in Australia as the earliest evidence of life on
Earth by 220 million years.
“This indicates the Earth was no longer some sort of hell 3.7 billion
years ago,” lead author Allen Nutman, of the University of Wollongong,
told Reuters of the findings that were published in the journal Nature.
“It was a place where life could flourish.”
“Stromatolites contain billions of bacteria … they’re making the
equivalent of apartment complexes,” said Martin Van Kranendonk, a
co-author at the University of New South Wales who identified the
previously oldest fossils, dating from 3.48 billion years ago.
At the time stromatolites started growing in gooey masses on a
forgotten seabed, the Earth was probably similar to Mars with liquid
water at the surface, orbiting a sun that was 30 percent dimmer than
today, the scientists said.
Those parallels could be a new spur to study whether Mars once had life, the authors said.
“Suddenly, Mars may look even more promising than before as a
potential abode for past life,” Abigail Allwood, of the California
Institute of Technology, wrote in a commentary in Nature.
The Greenland find was made after a retreat of snow and ice exposed
long-hidden rocks. Greenland’s government hopes that a thaw linked to
global warming will have positive spinoffs, such as exposing more
minerals.
Nutman said the main controversy was likely to be that the fossils
were in metamorphic rocks, reckoned to have formed under huge stress
with temperatures up to 550 degrees Celsius (1,022°F) — usually too high
to preserve any trace of life.
Still, Van Kranendonk told Reuters that dried-out biological material
could sometimes survive such a baking, adding he was “absolutely
convinced” by the Greenland fossils.
Links
No comments:
Post a Comment