Australian scientists have obtained clues about the origin of life on Earth by identifying fossil "biomarkers" in rocks more than two and a half billion years old.
The biomarkers are all that remains of a primitive form of cellular life that lived in the Earth's early oceans. They are a billion years older than the previous evidence for complex cells.
The molecules come from ancient single-celled organisms that scientists call eukaryotes, microbes made of a cell with internal structure.
The research demonstrates that even two and a half billion years ago, evolution had produced the basic divisions of life we see on our planet today.
It seems life arose almost immediately after the Earth had cooled and a solid crust had formed. The first three billion years of the Earth's history was the age of microbes.
Self-replicating molecules
First to appear were self-replicating molecules. Then these molecules became more complicated and evolved a membrane inside which they were protected from the changing external environment. These were the first cells that became primitive bacteria, termed Prokaryotes.
![[ image: width=150]](/olmedia/415000/images/_418540_life150.jpg)
What happened next is still highly controversial. One idea is that one type of cell went to live inside another forming the first cell with an internal membrane, the so-called eukaryotes.
All animals and plants are classified as eukaryotes. The prokaryote group contains two types of bacteria; the eubacteria and the mysterious archaebacteria which are as different from eubacteria as they are from eukaryotes.
This work, published in the journal Science, shows that by two and a half billion years ago, life was already complex. It adds to the mystery about how life began on Earth and developed so rapidly all those ages ago.
The bacteria that changed the Earth
(16 Aug 99 | Sci/Tech)
Q & A: DNA, the building blocks of life
(30 Jul 99 | Sci/Tech)
Ocean vents were "factories of life"
(09 Feb 99 | Sci/Tech)
Scientists poised to create life
(25 Jan 99 | Sci/Tech)
Science magazine
The Tree of Life
The BBC is not responsible for the content of external internet sites.
World's smallest transistor
Scientists join forces to study Arctic ozone
Mathematicians crack big puzzle
The growing threat of internet fraud
(From Business)
Who watches the pilots?
Cold 'cure' comes one step closer
(From Health)