Literature DB >> 11539735

Was the Archaean biosphere upside down?

J C Walker1.   

Abstract

Photosynthesis produces reduced organic carbon and an oxidized partner in equivalent molar amounts. These compounds can react with one another, again in equivalent molar amounts, so that no net change occurs in the overall level of oxidation of the biosphere (here taken to mean the biota together with the part of the Earth with which living things interact). But, the reduced and oxidized partners have different susceptibilities to transport by environmental processes and so, typically, they become separated. Conservation of matter implies that for every mole of excess oxidant in an oxidizing region of the biosphere there must be a mole of excess reductant in a reducing region. Today, the oxidized partner in photosynthesis is usually free oxygen, which floats upward to accumulate in excess in the atmosphere, whereas organic matter settles downward to collect in sediments and stagnant pools. On the anoxic Archean Earth, the oxidized partner was probably iron. As oxidized iron is markedly less soluble and mobile than organic carbon, differential transport in the Archaean biosphere would have had an effect just the opposite of that in the modern biosphere. The oxidized partner would have settled downward more rapidly than the reduced partner, resulting in the accumulation of excess oxidant in sediments and stagnant pools. An equivalent excess of the more volatile reduced compounds would have been left behind in ocean and atmosphere in the form of dissolved organic carbon and gaseous hydrocarbons. On average, therefore, the Archean biosphere may have been oxidizing at the bottom and reducing on top.

Entities:  

Keywords:  NASA Discipline Exobiology; NASA Discipline Number 52-30; NASA Program Exobiology; Non-NASA Center

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  1987        PMID: 11539735     DOI: 10.1038/329710a0

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Nature        ISSN: 0028-0836            Impact factor:   49.962


  26 in total

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Review 4.  The carbon cycle and associated redox processes through time.

Authors:  John M Hayes; Jacob R Waldbauer
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5.  The Paleoproterozoic snowball Earth: a climate disaster triggered by the evolution of oxygenic photosynthesis.

Authors:  Robert E Kopp; Joseph L Kirschvink; Isaac A Hilburn; Cody Z Nash
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6.  Novel mode of microbial energy metabolism: organic carbon oxidation coupled to dissimilatory reduction of iron or manganese.

Authors:  D R Lovley; E J Phillips
Journal:  Appl Environ Microbiol       Date:  1988-06       Impact factor: 4.792

7.  Origin of microbial biomineralization and magnetotaxis during the Archean.

Authors:  Wei Lin; Greig A Paterson; Qiyun Zhu; Yinzhao Wang; Evguenia Kopylova; Ying Li; Rob Knight; Dennis A Bazylinski; Rixiang Zhu; Joseph L Kirschvink; Yongxin Pan
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8.  Snowball Earth climate dynamics and Cryogenian geology-geobiology.

Authors:  Paul F Hoffman; Dorian S Abbot; Yosef Ashkenazy; Douglas I Benn; Jochen J Brocks; Phoebe A Cohen; Grant M Cox; Jessica R Creveling; Yannick Donnadieu; Douglas H Erwin; Ian J Fairchild; David Ferreira; Jason C Goodman; Galen P Halverson; Malte F Jansen; Guillaume Le Hir; Gordon D Love; Francis A Macdonald; Adam C Maloof; Camille A Partin; Gilles Ramstein; Brian E J Rose; Catherine V Rose; Peter M Sadler; Eli Tziperman; Aiko Voigt; Stephen G Warren
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9.  Phototrophs in high-iron-concentration microbial mats: physiological ecology of phototrophs in an iron-depositing hot spring.

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Review 10.  Dissimilatory Fe(III) and Mn(IV) reduction.

Authors:  D R Lovley
Journal:  Microbiol Rev       Date:  1991-06
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