The 3,430-million-year-old Strelley Pool Chert (SPC) (Pilbara Craton, Australia) is a sedimentary rock formation containing laminated structures of probable biological origin (stromatolites). Determining the biogenicity of such ancient fossils is the subject of ongoing debate. However, many obstacles to interpretation of the fossils are overcome in the SPC because of the broad extent, excellent preservation and morphological variety of its stromatolitic outcrops--which provide comprehensive palaeontological information on a scale exceeding other rocks of such age. Here we present a multi-kilometre-scale palaeontological and palaeoenvironmental study of the SPC, in which we identify seven stromatolite morphotypes--many previously undiscovered--in different parts of a peritidal carbonate platform. We undertake the first morphotype-specific analysis of the structures within their palaeoenvironment and refute contemporary abiogenic hypotheses for their formation. Finally, we argue that the diversity, complexity and environmental associations of the stromatolites describe patterns that--in similar settings throughout Earth's history--reflect the presence of organisms.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nature04764 | DOI Listing |
ACS Omega
December 2023
Geological Brigade 105, Bureau of Geology and Mineral Exploration and Development of Guizhou Province, Guiyang 550018, China.
Geobiology
February 2024
Centre for Exploration Targeting, School of Earth Sciences, University of Western Australia, Crawley, Western Australia, Australia.
Frutexites-like microstructures are described from the exhumed Late Devonian reef complexes of the northern Canning Basin, Western Australia. Several high-resolution imaging techniques, including X-ray microcomputerised tomography, scanning electron microscopy and X-ray fluorescence microscopy, were used to investigate morphology and composition in two samples. Three types of Frutexites-like microstructures (Types I-III) have been identified.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMetabolites
December 2022
Scripps Institution of Oceanography, University of California San Diego, San Diego, CA 92093, USA.
Recent developments in molecular networking have expanded our ability to characterize the metabolome of diverse samples that contain a significant proportion of ion features with no mass spectral match to known compounds. Manual and tool-assisted natural annotation propagation is readily used to classify molecular networks; however, currently no annotation propagation tools leverage consensus confidence strategies enabled by hierarchical chemical ontologies or enable the use of new tools without significant modification. Herein we present ConCISE (Consensus Classifications of Elucidations) which is the first tool to fuse molecular networking, spectral library matching and class predictions to establish accurate putative classifications for entire subnetworks.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicroorganisms
May 2022
Climate Change Cluster, University of Technology Sydney, Sydney 2007, Australia.
The genus is unique among phototrophic organisms due to the dominance of chlorophyll in its photosynthetic reaction centres and light-harvesting proteins. This allows to capture light energy for photosynthesis over an extended spectrum of up to ~760 nm in the near infra-red (NIR) spectrum. sp.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Phycol
December 2016
Marine Biological Section, Department of Biology, University of Copenhagen, Strandpromenaden 5, DK-3000, Helsingør, Denmark.
Chlorophyll (Chl) f, the most far-red (720-740 nm) absorbing Chl species, was discovered in cyanobacterial isolates from stromatolites and subsequently in other habitats as well. However, the spatial distribution and temporal dynamics of Chl f in a natural habitat have so far not been documented. Here, we report the presence of Chl f in cyanobacterial beachrock biofilms.
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