Article abstract
Nature Geoscience 2, 301 - 306 (2009)
Published online: 15 March 2009 | doi:10.1038/ngeo465
Subject Categories: Biogeochemistry | Palaeoclimate and palaeoceanography
Primary haematite formation in an oxygenated sea 3.46 billion years ago
Masamichi Hoashi1, David C. Bevacqua2, Tsubasa Otake2, Yumiko Watanabe2, Arthur H. Hickman3, Satoshi Utsunomiya4 & Hiroshi Ohmoto2
Abstract
The timing of the origin of photosynthesis on the early Earth is greatly debated. It is generally agreed, on the basis of the presence of biological molecules found in shales from the Hamersley Basin, Australia, that oxygenic photosynthesis had evolved 2.7 billion years (Gyr) ago. However, whether photosynthesis occurred before this time remains controversial. Here we report primary haematite crystals and associated minerals within the marine sedimentary rocks preserved in a jasper formation of the Pilbara Craton, Australia, which we interpret as evidence for the formation of these rocks in an oxygenated water body 3.46 Gyr ago. We suggest that these haematite crystals formed at temperatures greater than 60 °C from locally discharged hydrothermal fluids rich in ferrous iron. The crystals precipitated when the fluids rapidly mixed with overlying oxygenated sea water, at depths greater than 200 m. As our findings imply the existence of noticeable quantities of molecular oxygen, we propose that organisms capable of oxygenic photosynthesis evolved more than 700 million years earlier than previously recognized, resulting in the oxygenation of at least some intermediate and deep ocean regions.
- Frontier Science Research Centre, Kagoshima University, Kagoshima, 890-0065, Japan
- NASA Astrobiology Institute & Department of Geosciences, The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania 16802, USA
- Geological Survey of Western Australia, Department of Industry and Resources, Perth 6004, Western Australia
- Department of Chemistry, Kyushu University, Fukuoka, 810-8560, Japan
Correspondence to: Hiroshi Ohmoto2 e-mail: ohmoto@geosc.psu.edu
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