您现在的位置是:焦點 >>正文
【】
焦點476人已围观
简介Ancient rocks in northwestern Canada may contain the oldest evidence of life on Earth.Scientists hav ...
Ancient rocks in northwestern Canada may contain the oldest evidence of life on Earth.
Scientists have discovered remains of microorganisms that likely thrived around 3.8 billion years ago near volcanic vents on the seafloor, according to a study published Wednesday in Nature.
SEE ALSO:Scientists are firing lasers at dinosaur fossils, and the result is awesomeIron-dwelling bacteria left behind tiny, rusty filaments and tubes, which were found encased in layers of quartz in the Nuvvuagittuq supracrustal belt near Quebec.
"The fact we unearthed them from one of the oldest-known rock formations suggests we've found direct evidence of one of Earth's oldest life forms," Dominic Papineau, the study lead and a lecturer at University College London (UCL)'s Earth Sciences department, said in a press release.
A bright red concretion of an iron-rich and silica-rich rock, which contains microfossils.Credit: Dominic Papineau"This discovery helps us piece together the history of our planet and the remarkable life on it, and will help to identify traces of life elsewhere in the universe," he said. Most likely, that means searching for evidence of life on Mars.
Prior to this study, the oldest known microfossils were found in western Australia and dated at around 3.5 billion years ago. Scientists also uncovered a set of 3.7 billion-year-old microbial remains found in Greenland, although the evidence for life in the Arctic formations is not nearly as solid as that found in Australia.
Scientists from Canada, the U.K., the United States, Norway and Australia teamed up on the Canadian fossil study.
They searched for fossil evidence in the Nuvvuagittuq belt because it contains some of the Earth's oldest known sedimentary rocks, which were likely formed by deep-sea hydrothermal vents that spewed out scalding water laden with minerals, including iron.
These vents may have hosted bacterial life between 3.8 billion and 4.3 billion years ago, not long after the Earth formed.
Scientific evidence suggests our planet had liquid water at its surface around this time -- and possibly so did Mars.
Red hematite is seen inside layers of quartz.Credit: matthew doddThe fact that bacterial life was gushing from deep-sea vents in Earth's earliest years suggests the same might've been happening on the red planet, said Matthew Dodd, a doctoral student at the London Center for Nanotechnology and the study's first author.
The fossil find in Canada poses "exciting questions for extra-terrestrial life," he said in the press release. "We expect to find evidence for past life on Mars [4 billion] years ago, or if not, Earth may have been a special exception."
Featured Video For You
Google Earth Timelapse shows how man has altered the planet in 32 years
Tags:
转载:欢迎各位朋友分享到网络,但转载请说明文章出处“夫榮妻貴網”。http://www.new.maomao321.com/news/40e56199398.html
相关文章
Pole vaulter claims his penis is not to blame
焦點Following the cringeworthy moment in which pole vaulter Hiroki Ogita's penis grazed the bar and he f ...
【焦點】
阅读更多Guillermo del Toro's 'Nightmare Alley' is derailed by Bradley Cooper
焦點Bradley Cooper is a dashing and talented man, who has wielded his unique charisma into a string of t ...
【焦點】
阅读更多Conservatives dug up an old tweet from new Twitter CEO that quotes 'The Daily Show'
焦點It wouldn't be Twitter if there wasn't a new controversy about some decade-old tweets.Just hours aft ...
【焦點】
阅读更多
热门文章
- Samsung Galaxy Note7 teardown reveals the magic behind the phone's iris scanner
- There's a life
- 3 EVs make Edmunds top cars list, including new Porsche Taycan Cross Turismo
- The "we used to be a proper country" meme went viral on Twitter this week
- Balloon fanatic Tim Kaine is also, of course, very good at harmonica
- 3 EVs make Edmunds top cars list, including new Porsche Taycan Cross Turismo