Fossil find points to life on Earth 3.7bn years ago

Published September 2, 2016
This undated picture released on Thursday by the University of Wollongong shows professors Allen Nutman (left) and Vickie Bennett displaying rock specimen containing the 3.7-billion-year-old stromatolites.—AFP
This undated picture released on Thursday by the University of Wollongong shows professors Allen Nutman (left) and Vickie Bennett displaying rock specimen containing the 3.7-billion-year-old stromatolites.—AFP

SYDNEY: Life on Earth is even older than we thought, Australian scientists said on Thursday as they unveiled fossils dating back a staggering 3.7 billion years.

The tiny structures — called stromatolites — were found in ancient rock along the edge of Greenland’s ice cap, and were 220 million years older than the previous record holders.

They showed that life emerged fairly shortly — in geological terms — after Earth was formed some 4.5bn years ago, said lead researcher Allen Nutman of the University of Wollongong. And, he added, they offered hope that very basic life might at one point have existed on Mars.

“This discovery represents a new benchmark for the oldest preserved evidence of life on Earth,” Professor Martin Julian Van Kranendonk, a geology expert at the University of New South Wales and study co-author, said in a statement.

The structure and geochemistry of the rock in which the structures were found provided clues to a biological origin for the microfossils, he said, which in turn “points to a rapid emergence of life on Earth”.

The one-to-four centimetre high Isua stromatolites were exposed after the melting of a snow patch in the Isua Greenstone Belt of Greenland.

Stromatolites are formed when microorganisms, such as certain kinds of bacteria, trap bits of sediment together in layers. These layers build up over time to create solid rock.

Published in Dawn, September 2nd, 2016

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