|
NASA
Research Indicates Oxygen on Earth 2.5 Billion Years Ago
Thursday, September 27, 2007
NASA-funded
astrobiologists have found evidence of oxygen present in Earth's
atmosphere earlier than previously known, pushing back the
timeline for the rise of oxygen in the atmosphere. Two teams of
researchers report that traces of oxygen appeared in Earth's
atmosphere from 50 to 100 million years before what is known as
the Great Oxidation Event. This event happened between 2.3 and
2.4 billion years ago, when many scientists think atmospheric
oxygen increased significantly from the existing very low levels.
Scientists analyzed a kilometer-long drill core from
Western Australia, representing the time just before the major
rise of atmospheric oxygen. They found evidence that a small but
significant amount of oxygen was present in Earth's oceans and
atmosphere 2.5 billion years ago. The findings appear in a pair
of research papers in the Sept. 28 issue of the journal
Science.
"We seem to have captured a piece of time
during which the amount of oxygen was actually changing -- caught
in the act, as it were," said Ariel Anbar, an associate
professor at Arizona State University, Tempe, and leader of one
of the research teams.
The goal of both research teams
was to learn more about the environment and life in the oceans
leading up to the Great Oxidation Event. The researchers did not
expect to find evidence of oxygen earlier than what was
previously known.
"The core provides a continuous
record of environmental conditions, analogous to a tape
recording," explained Anbar. He and his research group
analyzed the amounts of the trace metals molybdenum, rhenium and
uranium. The quantity of these metals in oceans and sediments
depend on the amount of oxygen in the environment. The other
research group, led by Alan Kaufman of the University of
Maryland, College Park, Md., analyzed sulfur isotopes. Its
distribution also relies on the abundance of oxygen.
"Studying
the dynamics that gave rise to the presence of oxygen in Earth's
atmosphere deepens our appreciation of the complex interaction
between biology and geochemistry," said Carl Pilcher,
director of the NASA Astrobiology Institute at NASA's Ames
Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif., which co-funded the
study. "Their results support the idea that our planet and
the life on it evolved together."
One possible
explanation for the Great Oxidation Event is the ancient
ancestors of today's plants first began to produce oxygen by
photosynthesis. However, many geoscientists think organisms began
to produce oxygen much earlier, but the oxygen was destroyed in
reactions with volcanic gases and rocks.
"What we
have now is new evidence for some oxygen in the environment 50 to
100 million years before the big rise of oxygen," Anbar
said. "Our findings strengthen the notion that organisms
learned to produce oxygen long before the Great Oxidation Event,
and that the rise of oxygen in the atmosphere ultimately was
controlled by geological processes."
The
international project brought together researchers from Arizona
State University, the University of Maryland, the University of
Washington, the University of California, Riverside, and the
University of Alberta. The project received financial support
from the NASA Astrobiology Institute and the National Science
Foundation. The Geological Survey of Western Australia provided
logistical support.
Founded in 1998, the NASA
Astrobiology Institute is a partnership between NASA, 16 U.S.
teams and five international consortia to promote, conduct and
lead integrated multidisciplinary astrobiology research and train
a new generation of astrobiology researchers. The institute's
Astrobiology Drilling Program is an international program aimed
at coordinating continental drilling projects of astrobiological
significance, especially those concerning Earth's early atmospher
Source:
NASA
Time
Stamp: 9/27/2007 at 3:47:30 PM CST

|
Scientific
Frontline®
The
Comm Center
Space
Weather Alerts
Stellar
Nights®
The
E.A.R.®
World
Report News
Photo,
Sketches, & Video Gallery
|