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The world's oldest fossils or oily gunk? Research suggests these 3.5 billion-year-old rocks don't contain signs of life

The world's oldest fossils or oily gunk? Research suggests these 3.5 billion-year-old rocks don't contain signs of life
Credit: Saul Shepstein, Author provided

The Pilbara region of Western Australia is home to one of the most ancient surviving pieces of Earth's crust, which has been geologically unchanged since its creation some 3.5 billion years ago.

Some of the oldest signs of life have been found here, in the North Pole area west of the town of Marble Bar, in black rocks composed of fine-grained quartz called chert.

Some features in the so-called "Apex chert" have been identified as the fossilized remains of microbes much like the bacteria that still survive today. However, scientists have debated the true origin of these features ever since they were discovered 30 years ago.

In new research published in Science Advances, we show the carbon-rich compounds also found in the chert may have been produced by non-biological processes. This suggests the supposed "fossils" are not remnants of early lifeforms but rather artifacts of chemical and geological processes.

Controversial Pilbara fossils

In 1993, American paleobiologist William Schopf spotted carbon-rich filaments in outcrops of the 3.45 billion year old Apex chert. He interpreted them as the charred remains of fossilized microbes similar to cyanobacteria, which were Earth's first oxygen-producing organisms and are still abundant today.

The world's oldest fossils or oily gunk? Research suggests these 3.5 billion-year-old rocks don't contain signs of life
Veins of black chert found in the Pilbara open a window onto Earth as it was 3.5 billion years ago. Credit: Birger Rasmussen

The existence of fossilized cyanobacteria in such old rocks would imply that life was already pumping oxygen into the air more than a billion years before Earth's atmosphere became rich in oxygen.

A key piece of evidence in favor of life was the association of with the ancient fossils. This is because living cells are made up of large , which comprise mainly carbon as well as hydrogen, nitrogen, oxygen and other elements.

In 2002, Schopf's interpretation was challenged by English paleobiologist Martin Brasier and his team. They showed the "fossils" displayed a variety of shapes and sizes uncharacteristic of cyanobacteria, and indeed, inconsistent with microbial life. What's more, they also showed the -bearing black cherts were not horizontal beds deposited on the seafloor, but angled veins cutting across the underlying layers of rock.

The fossil-bearing cherts appeared to have formed at high temperatures during . Brasier argued this environment was hostile to life and the "fossils" were, in fact, formed from graphite impurities in the rock. They also speculated that the carbon associated with the "fossils" may not even be biological in origin.

A lively debate ensued, and it has continued ever since.

The world's oldest fossils or oily gunk? Research suggests these 3.5 billion-year-old rocks don't contain signs of life
Tiny structures like these, found in ancient black chert, have been interpreted as fossilised bacteria. Credit: Brasier et al.

Microbes or hot fluids?

To try to determine where the carbon-rich deposits in the black chert veins came from, we took a very close look at them with a high-magnification electron microscope.

We found it did not come from fossilized bacteria. The oil-like substance occurs as residues in fractures and as petrified droplets, which have previously been mistaken for ancient fossils.

The textures in the black chert veins indicate they were formed when hot fluids rich in silica and carbon moved through cracks in lava flows below vents in the seafloor similar to modern "black smoker" vents. Upon approaching the seafloor, the hot fluids infiltrated layers of volcanic sediment, replacing it with black chert.

If the carbon came from such a hot fluid, this supports findings that the carbon-rich filaments in the Apex chert are not fossils. However, it also raises a new question.

Typically, organic compounds such as oil and gas, which are referred to as "fossil fuels" because they form from the dead remains of algae, bacteria and plants, are generated when these remains are buried and heated to temperatures above 65℃. Chemical reactions release organic compounds, which may accumulate to form oil and gas fields.

However, the sediments from the North Pole area are very thin (less than 50m thick), poor in organic molecules, and sandwiched between kilometers of lava flows. So, how did the organic compounds form in such surroundings?

The world's oldest fossils or oily gunk? Research suggests these 3.5 billion-year-old rocks don't contain signs of life
Black chert veins may have formed when water came into contact with lava at seafloor vents. Credit: NOAA

Seafloor vents on early Earth

A possible alternative pathway is suggested from experimental evidence and research on Martian meteorites. In the absence of traditional biological sources, some of the organic molecules in the chert veins could have formed by non-biological processes.

For instance, when hot water circulates through lava or other igneous rock, water and carbon dioxide can react with mineral surfaces to form organic compounds. Similar reactions have been proposed to explain the presence of organic molecules in Martian meteorites and in some igneous rocks on Earth.

The carbon in black cherts from the Pilbara outback may therefore represent relics of organic compounds that were produced by reactions between water and rock. Indeed, on the early Earth seafloor vents may have created more organic compounds than biological processes did, making it difficult to distinguish between authentic carbon-bearing fossils and oily artifacts.

While more work is underway, early results suggest life was only just surviving 3.5 billion years ago, struggling to gain a foothold in an inhospitable environment. The world then was wracked by regular volcanic eruptions that covered Earth's surface in lava, and bathed in harsh solar radiation streaming through an atmosphere with no protective ozone layer.

Looking further back in time, the black cherts offer a glimpse of a lifeless planet. Reactions between water and rock at seafloor vents produced a cocktail of organic compounds, perhaps supplying the raw materials for the assembly of the first living cells.

More information: Birger Rasmussen et al, Organic carbon generation in 3.5-billion-year-old basalt-hosted seafloor hydrothermal vent systems, Science Advances (2023). DOI: 10.1126/sciadv.add7925

Journal information: Science Advances

Provided by The Conversation

This article is republished from The Conversation under a Creative Commons license. Read the original article.The Conversation

Citation: The world's oldest fossils or oily gunk? Research suggests these 3.5 billion-year-old rocks don't contain signs of life (2023, February 2) retrieved 3 May 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2023-02-world-oldest-fossils-oily-gunk.html
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