Granite rock formation |
By Sid Perkins, Science Now, June 15, 2012
Thank goodness for granite. If not for the formation and
subsequent erosion of large quantities of metal-rich granite on a
supercontinent that formed billions of years ago, the evolution of
multicellular life—including us—could have been stifled or delayed, according
to a new study.
For much of its history, life on Earth existed as only
single-celled organisms. Certain proteins critical for multicellular life, and
presumed to have been equally critical for its evolution from single-celled
ancestors, require heavy-metal elements, especially copper, zinc, and
molybdenum, says John Parnell, a geoscientist at the University of Aberdeen in
the United Kingdom. Previous studies suggest that multicellular life evolved sometime
between 1.6 billion and 1.2 billion years ago. Researchers thought that before
that innovation, these vital metals were locked away from environments where
life thrived—either sequestered in the oxygen-poor depths of the ocean or held
in ancient ore deposits in Earth's crust, waiting to be eroded.
Now, Parnell and his colleagues have proposed another
option that fits new geological evidence: The essential metals eroded from a
rare type of granite that formed in large amounts soon after Earth's landmasses
collided to create the supercontinent Nuna, about 1.9 billion years ago. The
team's analyses show that most deposits of this variety of granite—whose
chemical composition caused the metals to be concentrated in ore deposits that
were readily eroded, rather than distributed throughout the rock—formed between
1.8 billion and 1.3 billion years ago, when molten material from deep below
Earth's crust rose to just beneath the surface and crystallized.
The geological record worldwide contains copious
evidence that this form of granite began eroding almost immediately, delivering
a variety of metals to coastal and lowland environments, the researchers say.
For instance, ratios of strontium isotopes in ancient rocks originally
deposited as seafloor sediments reveal that erosion from the supercontinent
peaked at around 1.9 billion years ago. Also, large amounts of sulfate
minerals, particularly ones that formed as a result of evaporation of
mineral-rich waters in arid environments, began appearing around 1.7 billion
years ago, a sign that metal sulfides found in the ore-rich rocks deposits were
eroding, thereby releasing metals. Single-celled organisms incorporated
these trace metals into metal-binding proteins that ultimately enabled the
diversification of multicellular life, the researchers speculate online this month in Geology.
The team's findings "are interesting and
intriguing," says Ariel Anbar, a biogeochemist at Arizona State
University, Tempe. Although the rise of oxygen concentrations in the atmosphere
about 2.4 billion years ago suggests that increased erosion—and, therefore, an
increased flux of metals into the environment—was inevitable, the large amount
of freshly formed granite were undoubtedly an important source of metals too,
he adds.
Results of the new study add to the increasingly
detailed picture of Earth's geochemical evolution at a critical juncture in
life's history, says Chris Dupont, a microbial physiologist at the J. Craig
Venter Institute in San Diego, California. "It's an attractive
hypothesis," he notes. However, he adds, another alternative is that life
in the shallow waters surrounding the Nuna supercontinent was able to evolve
multicellularity by making do with smaller concentrations of metals than are
assumed by Parnell and his colleagues, rendering the increased delivery of
metals from granite moot.
Genetic studies of modern-day organisms suggest that the
proteins that make multicellularity possible, especially those requiring zinc,
evolved rather late, between 1.6 billion and 1.2 billion years ago, Dupont
notes. "Before that time, life was constrained, and then it expanded. The
problem is, we don't know what the metal concentrations in the ocean were
during this period, and we still have to identify the sources of these
metals."
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