| April
22, 2004
Multinational Team Of Scientists
Finds Early Life In Volcanic Lava
Science
paper describes geological setting favorable for the origin
of life
Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UCSD
By Mario Aguilera
Scientists from
the United States, Norway, Canada, and South Africa have identified
what is believed to be evidence of one of Earth's earliest forms
of life, a finding that could factor heavily into discussions
of the origins of life.
The
team, which includes a scientist from Scripps Institution of
Oceanography at the University of California, San Diego, found
microscopic life colonized in ancient volcanic lava dating nearly
3.5 billion years old, during a time known as the Archean.
The findings are reported
in the April 23 issue of the journal Science. The team
includes Harald Furnes and Neil Banerjee of the University of
Bergen, Norway; Karlis Muehlenbachs of the University of Alberta,
Canada; Hubert Staudigel of Scripps Institution; and Maarten
de Wit of the University of Cape Town, South Africa.
In 2001, Staudigel
and his colleagues documented how microscopic organisms, smaller
than the width of a human hair, are able to eat their way into
volcanic rock to form long, worm-like tubes (see http://scrippsnews.ucsd.edu/pressreleases/staudigel_rockeaters.cfm).
The new study, which
describes a similar finding in the Barberton Greenstone Belt,
a location several hundred miles east of Johannesburg, South
Africa, near Swaziland, proves that microbial processes that
can be seen today also occurred during the earliest stages of
the planet's history at the roots of life's origins. The Barberton
Greenstone Belt was
formed in an underwater setting in the planet's oceanic crust
but is now uplifted and accessible to land-based field work.
Until the team's expedition last June, this area had not been
extensively explored for signs of early life.
"Our evidence
is amongst the oldest evidence for life found so far,"
said Staudigel, a research geophysicist at the Cecil H. and
Ida M. Green Institute of Geophysics and Planetary Physics at
Scripps. "This area within the oceanic crust is a favorable
place for the origin of life. It offers relatively easy access
to seawater and volcanic environments such as deep-sea hydrothermal
systems-including a wide range of catalysts that are required
in the origin of life."
Staudigel also argues
that the region's previous geographic position in a submarine
environment below the ocean floor may have provided protection
from the life-stunting effects of meteorites that bombarded
Earth's surface billions of years ago.
"This finding
may allow us to cross-reference the visual clues of these microbial
fossils with their chemical fingerprints," said Staudigel.
"They may help us understand biological and chemical processes
that occurred 3.5 billion years ago, which is only one billion
years after the accretion of Earth from the solar nebula."
The
scientists identified the microbes in an area of Barberton with
ample volcanic eruptions called "pillow lavas." These
are formed when undersea volcanoes erupt and spew lava, which
cools quickly to form tube-like structures. Over time these
tubes harden and, when dissected by erosion, form pillow-like
formations.
"When the planet
was three-and-a-half billion years old there were no plants
or animals to eat," said Staudigel. "So to make a
living these microbes adapted to eating volcanic rock. That's
all there was."
The scientists now
plan to carefully analyze the microbes with sensitive instruments
to characterize their ancient activities within the pillow lava.
The study was funded
by the Norwegian Research Council, the National Sciences and
Engineering Research Council of Canada, the U.S. National Science
Foundation, the Agouron Institute and the National Research
Foundation of South Africa.
Media Contacts: Mario Aguilera or Cindy Clark
(858) 534-3624
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