• Aspects of the biological carbon cycle in a ca. 3.42-billion-year-old marine ecosystem

    From erik simpson@eastside.erik@gmail.com to sci.bio.paleontology on Sat Jan 27 10:39:29 2024
    From Newsgroup: sci.bio.paleontology

    https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0301926824000020?via%3Dihub

    Highlights

    rCo

    Metabolic diversity in the lower platform facies of the Buck Reef
    Chert.
    rCo

    Exceptional preservation of Paleoarchean carbonaceous matter also
    on molecular level.
    rCo

    Different carbonaceous matter appearance (e.g., clots, laminae,
    blocky aggregates).
    rCo

    Rapid silicification supported carbonaceous matter preservation.

    Abstract

    Microbial life on Earth was well established in the Paleoarchean, but
    insight into early ecosystem diversity and thus, the complexity of the
    early biological carbon cycle is limited. Here we investigated four carbonaceous chert samples from the lower platform facies of the ca. 3.42-billion-year-old Buck Reef Chert, Barberton greenstone belt. The
    analysis on multiple scales revealed exceptionally well-preserved
    carbonaceous matter, even on molecular level (aliphatic and aromatic hydrocarbons), resulting from rapid silicification. Geochemical evidence
    from stable carbon and multiple sulfur isotopes supports the presence of different microbial metabolisms in the Paleoarchean ecosystem. The local biological carbon cycle was dominated by photoautotrophs, but
    autotrophic sulfate reducers and methane- or acetate-producing microbes
    were also present. In areas of microbial methane or acetate release, methanotrophs or acetotrophs contributed to the overall biomass. These
    results highlight the metabolic diversity in the lower platform
    environment of the Buck Reef Chert, and underline that an advanced
    biological carbon cycle already existed in the early Archean.
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