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Nature 444, E18 (14 December 2006) | doi:10.1038/nature05499; Published online 13 December 2006

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Geochemistry: Biosignatures and abiotic constraints on early life

Barbara Sherwood Lollar1 & Thomas M. McCollom2

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Arising from: Y. Ueno, K. Yamada, N. Yoshida, S. Maruyama & Y. Isozaki Nature 440, 516–519 (2006); Ueno et al. reply

Ueno et al.1 contend that methane found in fluid inclusions within hydrothermally precipitated quartz in the Dresser Formation of western Australia (which is roughly 3.5 Gyr old) provides evidence for microbial methanogenesis in the early Archaean era. The authors discount alternative origins for this methane, suggesting that the range of delta13CCH4 values that they record (-56 to -36permil) is attributable to mixing between a primary microbial end-member with a delta13CCH4 value of less than -56permil and a mature thermogenic gas enriched in 13C (about -36permil). However, abiotic methane produced experimentally2, 3 and in other Precambrian greenstone settings4, 5 has 13C-depleted delta13CCH4 values, as well as Delta13CCO2–CH4 relationships that encompass the range measured for the inclusions by Ueno et al. — which suggests that an alternative, abiotic origin for the methane is equally plausible. The conclusions of Ueno et al. about the timing of the onset of microbial methanogenesis might not therefore be justified.

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