
Early Eukaryotes Restricted to Oxygenated Seafloors 1.7 Billion Years Ago
Photo Credit: Sachin Amjhad
Scientific Frontline: Extended "At a Glance" Summary: Benthic Origins of Early Eukaryotes
The Core Concept: The earliest known eukaryotic organisms were exclusively benthic, inhabiting shallow, oxygenated marine seafloors rather than drifting in the anoxic open oceans. Their evolution and geographic distribution were fundamentally constrained by the highly localized availability of oxygen.
Key Distinction/Mechanism: By correlating microfossil taxa with oxygen-sensitive minerals, researchers proved these organisms required oxygen for their lifecycles. Their complete absence in anoxic sediment layers confirms they were not pelagic (drifting in surface waters), as their remains would have otherwise settled into the anoxic depths.
Origin/History: Sedimentary evidence from the McArthur and Birrindudu basins in Australia dates these organisms to between 1.75 and 1.4 billion years ago, a period when atmospheric oxygen was at 1% or less of modern levels. Widespread eukaryotic diversification did not occur until after the Cryogenian glaciation, approximately 635 million years ago.



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