Building blocks of life came from deep EarthAugust 7th, 2012 in Space 
& Earth / Earth Sciences 
 
The rise of the first complex life depended on vital metals brought 
up to the Earth's surface from far below in vast granite deposits, a new study 
argues.
Metals like copper, zinc and molybdenum are essential ingredients for certain 
enzymes and proteins. These are needed for life forms with a complex internal 
structure, known as eukaryotes, to evolve. Without these metals the history of 
life could have been very different; plants and animals made of many cells 
could 
have taken hundreds of millions more years to develop, if they appeared at 
all.
The new study's authors realised that eukaryotes started appearing soon after 
a period of unusual geological activity, and wonder if it could have provided 
the raw materials they needed.
"Biologists have been saying for a long time that these three metals are 
essential for complex life to develop," says Professor John Parnell, a 
geologist 
at the University of Aberdeen and lead author of the paper, which appears in 
Geology. "And geologists have been aware that there was a period of 
unusual geological activity around the same time that would have brought an 
extraordinary amount of these metals to the surface. But I think we're the 
first 
to put the two together and suggest that the geological changes actually 
enabled 
the biological advances."
In particular, eukaryotic life is needed for sex differences to emerge. Until 
living things have both males and females, rapid evolution is impossible; 
sexual 
reproduction allows the mixing of genes from both parents, so that a population 
can contain much more variation for natural selection to work on. Before sexual 
reproduction, variations in populations of living things could stem only from 
occasional random mutations, so evolution moved much more slowly.
The explosion of new life took place during a period known as the 
Mesoproterozoic, around 1.6 billion years ago. This followed the birth of a new 
supercontinent known as Nuna or Columbia around 1.9 billion years ago, which 
triggered major changes in the activity of the Earth's mantle beneath.
Because of the thicker crust below the supercontinent, heat flow at the base 
of the crust was unusually high, leading to rising magma plumes that brought up 
metals that had previously been locked deeper in the Earth. After emerging 
through volcanic activity, this material cooled into vast new fields of 
granite, 
with deposits of metal sulphides disseminated throughout. As weathering slowly 
uncovered these, they turned to sulphates and were washed into rivers, lakes 
and 
shallow coastal waters, where they became available for use by living things. 
With these nutrients in place, the stage was set for the appearance of 
eukaryotes.
"Metals do come to the surface through normal volcanic processes, but we 
think this episode of high heat flow greatly accelerated the process. So it's 
possible that eukaryotes would still have developed if this hadn't happened, 
but 
it might have taken a lot longer," says Parnell.
Until recently, scientists thought these metals came instead from changes in 
the chemistry of the oceans. The discovery is part of a wider move towards 
theories that complex life got its start on land or in shallow waters rather 
than the deep ocean, as previously believed.
"I suspect that this increases the focus on the terrestrial origins of 
eukaryotes, as opposed to the deep marine ones," Parnell comments. "The onus is 
now on the palaeobiologists to go out and see what traces of early life they 
can 
find in the terrestrial record."
Provided by PlanetEarth Online
This story is republished courtesy of Planet Earth online, a free, 
companion website to the award-winning magazine Planet Earth published and 
funded by the Natural Environment Research Council (NERC).

"Building blocks of life came from deep Earth." August 7th, 2012. 
http://phys.org/news/2012-08-blocks-life-deep-earth.html
 

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