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Post Info TOPIC: Ancient life


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Grypania
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Grypania is an early, tube-shaped fossil from the Proterozoic Eon. The organism could have been a giant bacterium or bacterial colony, but because of its size (over one centimetre) and consistent form, is more likely to have been a eukaryotic alga. The oldest probable Grypania fossils date to about 2.1 billion years ago, and the youngest extended into the Mesoproterozoic Era. Grypania reproduced asexually.
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RE: Ancient life
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For years, geologists have analysed modern microbial mats to decipher how cells functioned as far back as 3 billion years.
Now, researchers have found a way to garner new information from cells by linking the even spacing between the thousands of tiny cones that dot the surfaces of stromatolite-forming microbial mats.
Nutrient-exchanging bacteria grow mostly on moist surfaces and collect dirt and minerals that crystallise over time.
Stromatolites are the bacteria that turn to stone just beneath the crystallised material, thereby recording their history within the crystalline skeletons.
They are considered to be the oldest fossils on Earth with patterns that also appear in cross-sectional slices of stromatolites that are 2.8 billion years old - to photosynthesis.

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Studies of an ancient microbe - thought to be amongst the earliest to inhabit Earth - have revealed for the first time that primitive life could have endured the massive meteor shower, the so-called "heavy bombardment", by surviving underground.
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Fossils show earliest animal trails

Trails found in rocks dating back 565 million years are thought to be the earliest evidence of animal locomotion ever found.
The newly-discovered fossils, from rocks in Newfoundland in Canada, were analysed by an international team led by Oxford University scientists. They identified over 70 fossilised trails indicating that some ancient creatures moved, in a similar way to modern sea anemones, across the seafloors of the Ediacaran Period.

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Early life on Earth may have developed more quickly than thought

The Earth's climate was far cooler - perhaps more than 50 degrees - billions of years ago, which could mean conditions for life all over the planet were more conducive than previously believed, according to a research team that includes a Texas A&M University expert who specialises in geobiology.
Mike Tice, a researcher in the Department of Geology and Geophysics at Texas A&M, says the findings could change current ideas about the earliest forms of life on Earth. The team includes scientists from Yale University and Stanford University, and their work is published in the current issue of Nature magazine.
Tice says the team examined rocks from the Buck Reef Chert in South Africa that are known to be about 3.4 billion years old, among the oldest ever discovered. They found features in them that are consistent with formation at water temperatures significantly lower than previous studies had suggested.

"Our research shows that the water temperature 3.4 billion years ago was at most 105 degrees, and while that's potentially very warm, it's far below the temperatures of 155 degrees or more that previous research has implied" - Mike Tice.

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Geologist analyses earliest shell-covered fossil animals
The fossil remains of some of the first animals with shells, ocean-dwelling creatures that measure a few centimetres in length and date to about 520 million years ago, provide a window on evolution at this time, according to scientists. Their research indicates that these animals were larger than previously thought.
John Moore, a Ph.D. student in the Department of Earth Science at UC Santa Barbara, and his collaborators, analysed fossils from the epoch called the Early Cambrian. During this important time in the history of the earth, there was a tremendous diversification of animal life in the oceans. Many of the major animal groups that are still alive today appeared at this time, as well as many unusual groups that went extinct. In particular, the Cambrian marked the first widespread occurrence of animals with shells or other hard parts. Many of these early animals had complex external armours containing dozens to thousands of tiny pieces. When the animals died, the armour fell apart. From the resulting jumbled puzzle pieces, Moore and his research team discerned what the animals were like, and how they are related to other animals.

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Microbial Landscape
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There's not much in the ice-covered lakes in the McMurdo Dry Valleys to interest anglers looking to land the big one. But for scientists who want to know more about some of Earth's earliest organisms - and, by extension, to recognise what life may look like on other planets - those unique ecosystems represent a useful portal to the past.

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RE: Ancient life
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Humans might not be walking on Earth today if not for the ancient fusing of two microscopic, single-celled organisms called prokaryotes, research has found. By comparing proteins present in more than 3000 different prokaryotes - a type of single-celled organism without a nucleus - molecular biologist James A. Lake from the University of California at Los Angeles' Centre for Astrobiology showed that two major classes of relatively simple microbes fused together more than 2.5 billion years ago. Lake's NASA-funded research reveals a new pathway for the evolution of life on Earth.

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Major insights into evolution of life reported by UCLA molecular biologist
Humans might not be walking the face of the Earth were it not for the ancient fusing of two prokaryotes - tiny life forms that do not have a cellular nucleus. UCLA molecular biologist James A. Lake reports important new insights about prokaryotes and the evolution of life in the Aug. 20 advance online edition of the journal Nature.
Endosymbiosis refers to a cell living within another cell. If the cells live together long enough, they will exchange genes; they merge but often keep their own cell membranes and sometimes their own genomes.
Lake has discovered the first exclusively prokaryote endosymbiosis. All other known endosymbioses have involved a eukaryote - a cell that contains a nucleus. Eukaryotes are found in all multicellular forms of life, including humans, animals and plants.

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Ediacarans
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Bizarre Fossil Organisms Likely Absorbed Nutrients through Their Skin
Five hundred million years ago, strange, mouthless marine creatures called Ediacarans may have soaked up dissolved nutrients exclusively through their skin.
Today, only single-celled organisms, such as bacteria, obtain all their food through their membranes, and some larger creatures, including sponges and corals, get a fraction of their sustenance via this process.
But there are physical limitations to this strategy - namely absorbing and distributing nutrients in an ever-larger body cavity - which is why animals evolved a branching circulatory system to take nutrients digested in the gut and transport them to the places where they are needed.
And that is why the Ediacarans, which could grow to up to one meter in length and are considered Earth's first complex organisms, have been such an enigma to palaeontologists.

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