Life Before 3850 Million Years Ago? What'sNEW

The most reasonable interpretation of the data is surely that... life existed on Earth more than 3850 million years ago. — Heinrich D. Holland (1)

Graph A report in Nature pushes back the date of the earliest evidence for the life on Earth. Based on the isotope ratios in carbon inclusions in apatite grains in a "banded iron" formation in Greenland, the date is now estimated as 3850 million years ago (2). This evidence squeezes the time available for life to originate from nonliving chemicals to "vanishingly short" (3):

"Many scientists believe that the chemical processes that gave rise to life must have taken hundreds of millions of years to develop the essential enzymes, proteins and genetic codes. Evidence of a very quick beginning might mean that there was too little time to complete the job on Earth, and that life therefore must have originated elsewhere, drifting through space to Earth in the form of spores or by some other means. This is known as the 'panspermia' theory."

What'sNEW since 1996

"The very early evolution of biological complexity," by Aaron D. Goldman and Gregory P. Fournier, doi:10.1016/j.tig.2024.09.001, TiG, Open Access, Nov (online 25 Sep) 2024. Using this approach, Moody et al. estimated the LUCA to have existed ~4.2 billion years ago. ...From this perspective, the LUCA and its environment are not unlike many microbial communities today.
15 Apr 2022: This means life could have begun as little as 300 million years after Earth formed.
28 Jan 2022: Faint-Sun Paradox considered.
08 Sep 2019: "Initial Darwinian ancestor" ...present on Earth before 4.5 billion years ago.
22 Aug 2018: LUCA before LHB?
Oldest Evidence of Terrestrial Life on a Young Earth by Anna Azvolinsky, The Scientist, 23 Jul 2018.
20 Dec 2017: Ancient fossil microorganisms indicate that life in the universe is common.
Early trace of life from 3.95 Ga sedimentary rocks in Labrador, Canada by T. Tashiro et al., Nature, 25 Sep 2017.
Elements of Eoarchean life trapped in mineral inclusions, by T. Hassenkam et al., doi:10.1038/nature23261, Nature, 03 Aug 2017.
Ancient plankton-like microfossils span two continents, by A'ndrea Elyse Messer, Penn State News (+PhysOrg.com), 13 Jul 2017.
02 Mar 2017: ...the mineralized remains of bacterial sheaths and extracellular filaments that are at least 3,770 million and possibly 4,280 million years old....
06 Jan 2017: Either life developed here super-fast or it came full-on as DNA life from afar.
11 Oct 2016: The presence of the ISB stromatolites ...is in accord with ...life's origin in the Hadean eon.
Oldest fossils in Greenland rock? Roland Pease, BBC News | Nicholas Wade, The New York Times | 31 Aug 2016.
20 Oct 2015: Carbon isotopes that may point to life have been found in 4.1 billion-year-old zircon.
Isotopic memory of atmospheric persistence, McGill University (+Science Daily), 14 Jan 2015. "Chemical analysis of some of the world's oldest rocks ...show that the air 4 billion years ago was very similar to that more than a billion years later, when the atmosphere ...supported a thriving microbial biosphere...."
9 Jun 2013: It is surprising to have large, potentially complex fossils that far back — Christopher H. House
Earth's 'Time Capsules' May Be Flawed by Sid Perkins, ScienceNow, 17 Nov 2011.
23 Aug 2011: Fossilized microorganisms that are 3.4 billion years old have been found in in Western Australian sandstone.
Young graphite, old rocks: looking for evidence of earliest life, Carnegie Institution for Science, 16 May 2011.
A New Picture of the Early Earth by Kenneth Chang, The New York Times, 1 Dec 2008.
1 Aug 2006: The case for life on Earth 3.8 billion years ago has been reinforced.
13 Jun 2006: Early life on Earth was already diverse, Australian and Canadian biologists conclude.
Was Early Earth a Cool World?, ScienceNow, 6 May 2005.
New Thermometer Confirms Wet Conditions on Earliest Earth, National Science Foundation, 5 May 2005.
Frances Westall, "Life on the Early Earth: A Sedimentary View" [summary], doi:10.1126/science.1107227, p 366-367 v 308, Science, 15 Apr 2005.
24 Mar 2005: Evidence for very old life is questioned.
Study resolves doubt about origin of Earth’s oldest rocks, possibility of finding traces of ancient life, University of Chicago, 16 Dec 2004.
Michael M. Tice and Donald R. Lowe, "Photosynthetic microbial mats in the 3,416-Myr-old ocean" [abstract], p 549-552 v 431, Nature, 30 Sep 2004.
Mark A. Van Zuilen, Aivo Lepland and Gustaf Arrhenius, "Reassessing the evidence for the earliest traces of life" [abstract], p 627-630 v 418, Nature, 8 Aug 2002.
Rex Dalton, "Squaring up over ancient life" [text], p 782-784 v 417, Nature, 20 June 2002.
Kenneth Chang, "Dusted for Life's Fingerprints, Rocks Fail" [text],The New York Times, 4 June 2002.
Earliest life or rare dirt? — fossil bacteria 3.5 bya? — by Tom Clark, Nature Science Update, 7 Mar 2002.
The First Sulfur Eaters, "3.47 billion years ago," by Leslie Mullen for NASA Astrobiology Institute, on SpaceDaily, 19 Dec 2001.
2001, January 17: Earth had liquid water 4.3 to 4.4 billion years ago.
Australia fossil... A 1.25 meter, "egg carton" shaped rock contains fossilized stromatolites. At 3.46 billion years old, "this is the oldest solid evidence of biogenic structures in the world." CNN.com, 3 September 1999.
Yuji Sano, Kentaro Terada, Yoshio Takahashi and Allen P Nutman. "Origin of life from apatite dating?" and reply by S. J. Mojzsis, T. M. Harrison, G. Arrhenius, K. D. McKeegan and M. Grove, p 127-128 v 400, Nature, 8 July 1999. Lead isotopes might indicate a younger age for the sediments, but Mojzsis et al. do not retreat.
1999, February 10: New evidence for old life.
Hints of life from 3.7 billion years ago: Scientists find signature of plankton in tiny specks of graphite within rock. MSNBC, 28 January 1999.
Life on Earth Began at Least 3.85 Billion Years Ago, 400 Million Years Earlier than Previously Thought, Scientists Say, NASA News Release 96-230, November 6, 1996.
Science News Online - This Week - News Feature - 11/9/96
Earliest Known Life on Earth. News Release from Oxford Brookes University, December 8, 1996.

Arrhenius and Mojzsis
Arrhenius and Mojzsis

References

1. Heinrich D. Holland, "Evidence for Life on Earth More Than 3850 Million Years Ago" [summary], doi:10.1126/science.275.5296.38, p 38-39 v 275, Science, 3 January 1997.
2. S.J. Mojzsis, G. Arrhenius, K.D. McKeegan, T.M. Harrison, A.P. Nutman and R.L. Friend, "Evidence of life on Earth before 3,800 million years ago" [abstract], doi:10.1038/384055a0, p 55-59 and commentary by John M. Hayes, "The earliest memories of life on Earth," doi:10.1038/384021a0, p 22-23 v 384, Nature, 7 November 1996.
3. Malcolm W. Browne, "Evidence Puts Date for Life's Origin Back Millions of Years" [text], The New York Times, 7 November 1996.
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