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Aug.
29, 2007 "The rise of
oxygen allowed for the
evolution of complex oxygen-breathing life forms," says Lee R. Kump,
professor of geoscience, Before 2.5 billion
years ago, the Earth's
atmosphere lacked oxygen. However, biomarkers in rocks 200 million
years older
than that period, show oxygen-producing cyanobacteria released oxygen
at the
same levels as today. The oxygen produced then, had to be going
somewhere. "The absence of
oxidized soil profiles
and red beds indicates that oxidative weathering rates were negligible
during
the Archaean," the researchers report in today's (Aug. 30) issue of
Nature.
The ancient Earth
should have had an oxygen
atmosphere but something was converting, reducing, the oxygen and
removing it
from the atmosphere. The researchers suggest that submarine volcanoes,
producing a reducing mixture of gases and lavas, effectively scrubbed
oxygen
from the atmosphere, binding it into oxygen containing minerals. "The Archaean more
than 2.5 billion
years ago seemed to be dominated by submarine volcanoes," says Kump.
"Subaerial andesite volcanoes on thickened continental crust seem to be
almost absent in the Archaean." About 2.5 billion
years ago at the
Archaean/Proterozoic boundary, when stabilized continental land masses
arose
and terrestrial volcanoes appeared, markers show that oxygen began
appearing in
the atmosphere. Kump and Mark E.
Barley, professor of
geology, University of Western Australia, looked at the geologic record
from
the Archaean and the Palaeoproterozoic in search of the remains of
volcanoes.
They found that the Archaean was nearly devoid of terrestrial
volcanoes, but
heavily populated by submarine volcanoes. The Palaeoproterozoic,
however, had
ample terrestrial volcanic activity along with continuing submarine
volcanism.
Subaerial volcanoes arose after 2.5 billion years ago and did not strip
oxygen
from the air. Having a mix of volcanoes dominated by terrestrial
volcanoes
allowed oxygen to exist in the atmosphere. Terrestrial
volcanoes could become much more
common in the Palaeoproterozoic because land masses stabilized and the
current
tectonic regime came into play. The researchers
looked at the ratio of
submarine to subaerial volcanoes through time. Because
submarine
volcanoes erupt at lower temperatures than terrestrial volcanoes, they
are more
reducing. As long as the reducing ability of the submarine volcanoes
was larger
than the amounts of oxygen created, the atmosphere had no oxygen. When
terrestrial volcanoes began to dominate, oxygen levels increased. The National
Science Foundation, NASA
Astrobiology Institute and the Australian Research Council supported
this work.
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