Interesting bit of sci-news that seems to suggest photosynthesizing life began 
oxygenating the earth's atmosphere some 700 million years earlier than is 
generally believed. It also implies that it took much less time in order for 
life to evolve the complex machinery of photosynthesis (alternatively it took 
much longer than the now relatively short period (in geologic time frames) that 
life would have had on earth to master this complex process. An alternative 
explanation would be that life evolved on some other much older star system 
billions of years before our sun was even formed and has been slowly spreading 
-- over the eons -- throughout our galaxy/universe ever since, preserved in the 
deep freeze of wandering interstellar comets e.g. - the panspermia hypothesis. 
Even if viable organisms could not survive the lengthy periods of stasis with 
their DNA eventually breaking down to the point where the organisms are no 
longer viable, comets could
 have still delivered particularly important catalysts that are vital to the 
evolution of critical cellular mechanisms (such as transcription factors for 
example); there are a series of these critical catalysts that are not easy to 
spontaneously assemble and without which the dynamic chemical processes 
necessary for life do not occur.
-Chris
 
We might have to take a second look at the evolution of life on earth.
http://www.natureworldnews.com/articles/4171/20130926/life-earth-older-previous-estimates-traces-oxygen-found-3-billion.htm
 
A study on ancient soils has shown that oxygen was present on earth about three 
billion years ago, pushing evolution of oxygen-breathing organisms back in 
time. The study also supports the idea that life might have evolved on other 
planets.
 
The appearance of oxygen changed the way life evolved on Earth. Until, now 
researchers believed that the Great Oxygenation Event- a dynamic period of 
oxygen accumulation- occurred about 2.3 billion years back. The latest study 
argues that this event might have occurred 700 million years earlier than 
previously believed.

The origin of life on earth is still a matter of debate. What we do know is 
that cyanobacteria- a class of bacteria that photosynthesize and release oxygen 
introduced the gas to the atmosphere.
"We've always known that oxygen production by photosynthesis led to the 
eventual oxygenation of the atmosphere and the evolution of aerobic life," said 
Sean Crowe, co-lead author of the study and an assistant professor in the 
Departments of Microbiology and Immunology, and Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric 
Sciences at UBC.
We might have to take a second look at the evolution of life on earth.
life-earth-older-previous-estimates-traces-oxygen-found-3-billion
A study on ancient soils has shown that oxygen was present on earth about three 
billion years ago, pushing evolution of oxygen-breathing organisms back in 
time. The study also supports the idea that life might have evolved on other 
planets.
The appearance of oxygen changed the way life evolved on Earth. Until, now 
researchers believed that the Great Oxygenation Event- a dynamic period of 
oxygen accumulation- occurred about 2.3 billion years back. The latest study 
argues that this event might have occurred 700 million years earlier than 
previously believed.
For the study, researchers looked at levels of chromium and other metals in 
soil samples obtained from South Africa. The samples for the study were 
collected from The Nsuze paleosol, an ancient soil sandwiched between volcanic 
and sedimentary rocks, about 3 billion years old. Researchers also obtained 
samples from Ijzermyn iron formation to compare the levels of minerals, 
according to Space Reporter.
The experts looked at levels of chromium isotopes to look for traces of oxygen. 
Isotopes are variants of a chemical with same number of protons, but different 
number of neutrons. For example Chromium 53 (with 29 neutrons) is heavier than 
chromium 52 (with 28 neutrons).
During weathering, heavier chromium 53 gets washed from rocks and is deposited 
in the sea by rivers. This means that marine samples would have higher levels 
of heavier chromium than terrestrial samples. In the study too, researchers 
found that marine sediments had higher levels of heavier metal isotopes, 
Livescience said.
"This study now suggests that the process began very early in Earth's history, 
supporting a much greater antiquity for oxygen producing photosynthesis and 
aerobic life," said Crowe in a news release.
According to the researchers, the study also supports the idea that life could 
have evolved in other parts of the Universe.
"It's exciting that it took a relatively short time for oxygenic photosynthesis 
to evolve on Earth," Crowe told Livescience. "It means that it could happen on 
other planets on Earth, expanding the number of worlds that could've developed 
oxygenated atmospheres and complex oxygen-breathing life."
The study is published in the journal Nature.

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