scholarly journals Frontiers in early Earth history and primordial life – Part II

2018 ◽  
Vol 9 (4) ◽  
pp. 1021-1022
Author(s):  
S. Maruyama ◽  
M. Santosh
2017 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 211-213 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Maruyama ◽  
M. Santosh

Author(s):  
Egor Koemets ◽  
Timofey Fedotenko ◽  
Saiana Khandarkhaeva ◽  
Maxim Bykov ◽  
Elena Bykova ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Egor Koemets ◽  
Timofey Fedotenko ◽  
Saiana Khandarkhaeva ◽  
Maxim Bykov ◽  
Elena Bykova ◽  
...  

2006 ◽  
Vol 29 (1) ◽  
pp. 55-80
Author(s):  
Jere H Lipps

The major features of protist evolution are fraught with controversies, problems and few answers, especially in early Earth history. In general they are based on molecular data and fossil evidence that respectively provide a scaffold and details of eukaryotic phylogenetic and ecologic histories. 1. Their origin, inferred from molecular sequences, occurred very early (>;3Ga). They are a chimera of different symbiont-derived organelles, including possibly the nucleus. 2. The initial diversification of eukaryotes may have occurred early in geologic time. Six supergroups exist today, each with fossils known from the Proterozoic and Phanerozoic. 3. Sex, considered an important development, may have been inherited from bacteria. 4. Precambrian protists were largely pelagic cyst-bearing taxa, but benthic forms were probably quite diverse and abundant. 5. Protists gave rise to animals long before 600 Ma through the choanoflagellates, for which no fossil record exists. 6. Acritarchs and skeletonized protists radiated in the Cambrian (544-530 my). From then on, they radiated and became extinct at all the major events recorded in the metazoan fossil record. 7. Protists dominated major environments (shelves and reefs) starting with a significant radiation in the Ordovician, followed by extinctions and other radiations until most died out at the end of the Permian. 8. In the Mesozoic, new planktic protozoa and algae appeared and radiated in pelagic environments. 9. Modern protists are important at all trophic levels in the oceans and a huge number terrestrial, parasitic and symbiotic protists must have existed for much of geologic time as well. 10. The future of protists is likely in jeopardy, just like most reefal, benthic, and planktic metazoans. An urgent need to understand the role of protists in modern threatened oceans should be addressed soon.


2000 ◽  
pp. 435-458
Author(s):  
D. Porcelli ◽  
R. O. Pepin
Keyword(s):  
Rare Gas ◽  

2021 ◽  
Author(s):  
Masaru Konishi Nobu ◽  
Ryosuke Nakai ◽  
Satoshi Tamazawa ◽  
Hiroshi Mori ◽  
Atsushi Toyoda ◽  
...  

Primordial microorganisms are postulated to have emerged in H2-rich alkaline Hadean serpentinite-hosted environments with homoacetogenesis as a core metabolism. However, investigation of two modern serpentinization-active analogues of early Earth reveals that conventional H2-/CO2-dependent homoacetogenesis is thermodynamically unfavorable in situ due to picomolar CO2 levels. Through metagenomics and thermodynamics, we discover unique taxa capable of metabolism adapted to the habitat. This included a novel deep-branching phylum, "Ca. Lithoacetigenota", that exclusively inhabits Hadean analogues and harbors genes encoding alternative modes of H2-utilizing lithotrophy. Rather than CO2, these metabolisms utilize reduced carbon compounds detected in situ presumably serpentinization-derived: formate and glycine. The former employs a partial homoacetogenesis pathway and the latter a distinct pathway mediated by a rare selenoprotein - the glycine reductase. A survey of serpentinite-hosted system microbiomes shows that glycine reductases are diverse and nearly ubiquitous in Hadean analogues. "Ca. Lithoacetigenota" glycine reductases represent a basal lineage, suggesting that catabolic glycine reduction is an ancient bacterial innovation for gaining energy from geogenic H2 even under serpentinization-associated hyperalkaline, CO2-poor conditions. This draws remarkable parallels with ancestral archaeal H2-driven methyl-reducing methanogenesis recently proposed. Unique non-CO2-reducing metabolic strategies presented here may provide a new view into metabolisms that supported primordial life and the diversification of LUCA towards Archaea and Bacteria.


Geology ◽  
2020 ◽  
Vol 49 (4) ◽  
pp. 382-386
Author(s):  
Sergey N. Britvin ◽  
Michail N. Murashko ◽  
Yevgeny Vapnik ◽  
Natalia S. Vlasenko ◽  
Maria G. Krzhizhanovskaya ◽  
...  

Abstract Cyclophosphates are a class of energy-rich compounds whose hydrolytic decomposition (ring opening) liberates energy that is sufficient for initiation of biomimetic phosphorylation reactions. Because of that, cyclophosphates might be considered as a likely source of reactive prebiotic phosphorus on early Earth. A major obstacle toward adoption of this hypothesis is that cyclophosphates have so far not been encountered in nature. We herein report on the discovery of these minerals in the terrestrial environment, at the Dead Sea basin in Israel. Cyclophosphates represent the most condensed phosphate species known in nature. A pathway for cyclophosphate geosynthesis is herein proposed, involving simple pyrolytic oxidation of terrestrial phosphides. Discovery of natural cyclophosphates opens new opportunities for modeling prebiotic phosphorylation reactions that resulted in the emergence of primordial life on our planet.


2011 ◽  
Vol 311 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 253-263 ◽  
Author(s):  
Brian D. Connolly ◽  
Igor S. Puchtel ◽  
Richard J. Walker ◽  
Ricardo Arevalo ◽  
Philip M. Piccoli ◽  
...  

2018 ◽  
Vol 2 (2) ◽  
pp. 121-124
Author(s):  
Timothy W. Lyons ◽  
Mary L. Droser ◽  
Kimberly V. Lau ◽  
Susannah M. Porter

The history of life on Earth progressed in parallel with the evolving oxygen state of the atmosphere and oceans, but the details of that relationship remain poorly known and debated. There is, however, general agreement that the first appreciable and persistent accumulation of oxygen in the oceans and atmosphere occurred around 2.3 to 2.4 billion years ago. Following this Great Oxidation Event, biospheric oxygen remained at relatively stable intermediate levels for more than a billion years. Much current research focuses on the transition from the intermediate conditions of this middle chapter in Earth history to the more oxygenated periods that followed — often emphasizing whether increasing and perhaps episodic oxygenation drove fundamental steps in the evolution of complex life and, if so, when. These relationships among early organisms and their environments are the thematic threads that stitch together the papers in this collection. Expert authors bring a mix of methods and opinions to their leading-edge reviews of the earliest proliferation and ecological impacts of eukaryotic life, the subsequent emergence and ecological divergence of animals, and the corresponding causes and consequences of environmental change.


Sign in / Sign up

Export Citation Format

Share Document