Sunday, 24 December 2017

First photosynthesis took place 1.25 billion years ago: Study

The process of photosynthesis in plants first took place 1.25 billion years ago, finds a study that identified an algae fossil, believed to be the world's oldest known direct ancestor of modern plants and animals.
The study could resolve a long-standing mystery over the age of the fossilised algae -- Bangiomorpha pubescens -- which were first discovered in rocks in Arctic Canada in 1990, the researchers said.
Earlier estimates had placed it somewhere between 720 million and 1.2 billion years.

           
However, to pinpoint the microscopic organism's exact age, the researchers from McGill University in Canada, collected samples of black shale from rock layers that sandwiched the rock unit containing fossils of the Bangiomorpha pubescens, from the rugged area of remote Baffin Island.
Using a dating technique applied increasingly to sedimentary rocks, they determined that the rocks are 1.047 billion years old.

"That's 150 million years younger than commonly held estimates, and confirms that this fossil is spectacular," said Galen Halverson, Associate Professor at McGill's Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences.
"This will enable scientists to make more precise assessments of the early evolution of eukaryotes, the celled organisms that include plants and animals," Halverson added, in the paper published in the journal Geology.
 morehttps://m.economictimes.com/news/science/first-photosynthesis-took-place-1-25-billion-years-ago-study/articleshow/62231708.cms

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