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Mineral
Kingdom Has Co-Evolved with Life
Friday, November 14, 2008
Credit:
Carnegie Institution of Washington /
Geophysical
Laboratory
Evolution isn’t just
for living organisms. Scientists at the Carnegie Institution have
found that the mineral kingdom co-evolved with life, and that up
to two thirds of the more than 4,000 known types of minerals on
Earth can be directly or indirectly linked to biological
activity. The finding, published in American Mineralogist*,
could aid scientists in the search for life on other planets.
Robert Hazen and Dominic
Papineau of the Carnegie Institution’s Geophysical
Laboratory, with six colleagues, reviewed the physical, chemical,
and biological processes that gradually transformed about a dozen
different primordial minerals in ancient interstellar dust grains
to the thousands of mineral species on the present-day Earth.
(Unlike biological species, each mineral species is defined by
its characteristic chemical makeup and crystal structure.)
“It’s a different
way of looking at minerals from more traditional approaches,”
says Hazen. “Mineral evolution is obviously different from
Darwinian evolution—minerals don’t mutate, reproduce
or compete like living organisms. But we found both the variety
and relative abundances of minerals have changed dramatically
over more than 4.5 billion years of Earth’s history.”
All the chemical elements were
present from the start in the Solar Systems’ primordial
dust, but they formed comparatively few minerals. Only after
large bodies such as the Sun and planets congealed did there
exist the extremes of temperature and pressure required to forge
a large diversity of mineral species. Many elements were also too
dispersed in the original dust clouds to be able to solidify into
mineral crystals.
As the Solar System took shape
through “gravitational clumping” of small,
undifferentiated bodies—fragments of which are found today
in the form of meteorites—about 60 different minerals made
their appearance. Larger, planet-sized bodies, especially those
with volcanic activity and bearing significant amounts of water,
could have given rise to several hundred new mineral species.
Mars and Venus, which Hazen and coworkers estimate to have at
least 500 different mineral species in their surface rocks,
appear to have reached this stage in their mineral evolution.
However, only on Earth—at
least in our Solar System—did mineral evolution progress to
the next stages. A key factor was the churning of the planet’s
interior by plate tectonics, the process that drives the slow
shifting continents and ocean basins over geological time. Unique
to Earth, plate tectonics created new kinds of physical and
chemical environments where minerals could form, and thereby
boosted mineral diversity to more than a thousand types.
What ultimately had the biggest
impact on mineral evolution, however, was the origin of life,
approximately 4 billion years ago. “Of the approximately
4,300 known mineral species on Earth, perhaps two thirds of them
are biologically mediated,” says Hazen. “This is
principally a consequence of our oxygen-rich atmosphere, which is
a product of photosynthesis by microscopic algae.” Many
important minerals are oxidized weathering products, including
ores of iron, copper and many other metals.
Microorganisms and plants also
accelerated the production of diverse clay minerals. In the
oceans, the evolution of organisms with shells and mineralized
skeletons generated thick layered deposits of minerals such as
calcite, which would be rare on a lifeless planet.
“For at least 2.5 billion
years, and possibly since the emergence of life, Earth’s
mineralogy has evolved in parallel with biology,” says
Hazen. “One implication of this finding is that remote
observations of the mineralogy of other moons and planets may
provide crucial evidence for biological influences beyond Earth.”
Stanford University geologist
Gary Ernst called the study “breathtaking,” saying
that “the unique perspective presented in this paper may
revolutionize the way Earth scientists regard minerals.”
Source:
Carnegie Institution of Washington

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