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Ingredients for microbial life preserved in 3.5 billion-year-old fluid inclusions

Earth Sciences

Ingredients for microbial life preserved in 3.5 billion-year-old fluid inclusions

H. Mißbach, J. Duda, et al.

Delve into groundbreaking research revealing primordial organic molecules in ancient barites, pivotal for understanding the origins of life. This study, conducted by renowned researchers including Helge Mißbach and Jan-Peter Duda, uncovers the essential ingredients that shaped early Archaean life.... show more
Abstract
It is widely hypothesised that primeval life utilised small organic molecules as sources of carbon and energy. However, the presence of such primordial ingredients in early Earth habitats has not yet been demonstrated. Here we report the existence of indigenous organic molecules and gases in primary fluid inclusions in c. 3.5-billion-year-old barites (Dresser Formation, Pilbara Craton, Western Australia). The compounds identified (e.g., H2S, COS, CS2, CH4, acetic acid, organic (poly-)sulfanes, thiols) may have formed important substrates for purported ancestral sulfur and methanogenic metabolisms. They also include stable building blocks of methyl thioacetate (methanethiol, acetic acid) – a putative key agent in primordial energy metabolism and thus the emergence of life. Delivered by hydrothermal fluids, some of these compounds may have fuelled microbial communities associated with the barite deposits. Our findings demonstrate that early Archaean hydrothermal fluids contained essential primordial ingredients that provided fertile substrates for earliest life on our planet.
Publisher
Nature Communications
Published On
May 11, 2021
Authors
Helge Mißbach, Jan-Peter Duda, Alfons M. van den Kerkhof, Volker Lüders, Andreas Pack, Joachim Reitner, Volker Thiel
Tags
primordial organic molecules
fluid inclusions
Dresser Formation
hydrothermal fluids
early life
methanogenic metabolisms
sulfur compounds
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