Ancient Fossil Microorganisms
Indicate
that Life in the Universe is Common
UCLA andUniversity of Wisconsin scientists
analyze specimens from 3.465 billion years ago
By Stuart Wolpert
that Life in the Universe is Common
UCLA and
analyze specimens from 3.465 billion years ago
By Stuart Wolpert
December 18, 2017 --
A new analysis of the oldest known fossil microorganisms provides strong
evidence to support an increasingly widespread understanding that life in the
universe is common.
The microorganisms, from Western Australia , are 3.465 billion years
old. Scientists from UCLA and the University of Wisconsin–Madison report today
in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences that two of the
species they studied appear to have performed a primitive form of
photosynthesis, another apparently produced methane gas, and two others appear
to have consumed methane and used it to build their cell walls.
The evidence that a diverse group of organisms had already
evolved extremely early in the Earth’s history — combined with scientists’
knowledge of the vast number of stars in the universe and the growing understanding
that planets orbit so many of them — strengthens the case for life existing
elsewhere in the universe because it would be extremely unlikely that life
formed quickly on Earth but did not arise anywhere else.
“By 3.465 billion years ago, life was already diverse on
Earth; that’s clear — primitive photosynthesizers, methane producers, methane
users,” said J. William Schopf, a professor of paleobiology in the UCLA College ,
and the study’s lead author. “These are the first data that show the very diverse
organisms at that time in Earth’s history, and our previous research has shown
that there were sulfur users 3.4 billion years ago as well.
“This tells us life had to have begun substantially earlier
and it confirms that it was not difficult for primitive life to form and to
evolve into more advanced microorganisms.”
Schopf said scientists still do not know how much earlier
life might have begun.
“But, if the conditions are right, it looks like life in the
universe should be widespread,” he said.
The study is the most detailed ever conducted on
microorganisms preserved in such ancient fossils. Researchers led by Schopf
first described the fossils in the journal Science in 1993, and then
substantiated their biological origin in the journal Nature in 2002. But the
new study is the first to establish what kind of biological microbial organisms
they are, and how advanced or primitive they are.
For the new research, Schopf and his colleagues analyzed the
microorganisms with cutting-edge technology called secondary ion mass
spectroscopy, or SIMS, which reveals the ratio of carbon-12 to carbon-13
isotopes — information scientists can use to determine how the microorganisms
lived. (Photosynthetic bacteria have different carbon signatures from methane
producers and consumers, for example.) In 2000, Schopf became the first
scientist to use SIMS to analyze microscopic fossils preserved in rocks; he
said the technology will likely be used to study samples brought back from Mars
for signs of life.
The Wisconsin researchers, led by geoscience professor John Valley ,
used a secondary ion mass spectrometer — one of just a few in the world — to
separate the carbon from each fossil into its constituent isotopes and
determine their ratios.
“The differences in carbon isotope ratios correlate with
their shapes,” Valley said. “Their C-13-to-C-12 ratios are characteristic of
biology and metabolic function.”
The fossils were formed at a time when there was very little
oxygen in the atmosphere, Schopf said. He thinks that advanced photosynthesis
had not yet evolved, and that oxygen first appeared on Earth approximately half
a billion years later before its concentration in our atmosphere increased
rapidly starting about 2 billion years ago.Oxygen would have been poisonous to
these microorganisms, and would have killed them, he said.
Primitive photosynthesizers are fairly rare on Earth today
because they exist only in places where there is light but no oxygen — normally
there is abundant oxygen anywhere there is light. And the existence of the
rocks the scientists analyzed is also rather remarkable: The average lifetime
of a rock exposed on the surface of the Earth is about 200 million years,
Schopf said, adding that when he began his career, there was no fossil evidence
of life dating back farther than 500 million years ago.
“The rocks we studied are about as far back as rocks go.”
While the study strongly suggests the presence of primitive
life forms throughout the universe, Schopf said the presence of more advanced
life is very possible but less certain.
One of the paper’s co-authors is Anatoliy Kudryavtsev, a
senior scientist at UCLA’s Center for the Study of Evolution and the Origin of
Life, of which Schopf is director. The research was funded by the NASA
Astrobiology Institute.
In May 2017, a paper in PNAS by Schopf, UCLA graduate
student Amanda Garcia and colleagues in Japan showed the Earth’s
near-surface ocean temperature has dramatically decreased over the past 3.5
billion years. The work was based on their analysis of a type of ancient enzyme
present in virtually all organisms.
In, 2015 Schopf was part of an international team of
scientists that described in PNAS their discovery of the greatest absence of
evolution ever reported — a type of deep-sea microorganism that appears not to
have evolved over more than 2 billion years.
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