Literature DB >> 26430911

Microbes, Mineral Evolution, and the Rise of Microcontinents-Origin and Coevolution of Life with Early Earth.

Eugene G Grosch1, Robert M Hazen2.   

Abstract

Earth is the most mineralogically diverse planet in our solar system, the direct consequence of a coevolving geosphere and biosphere. We consider the possibility that a microbial biosphere originated and thrived in the early Hadean-Archean Earth subseafloor environment, with fundamental consequences for the complex evolution and habitability of our planet. In this hypothesis paper, we explore possible venues for the origin of life and the direct consequences of microbially mediated, low-temperature hydrothermal alteration of the early oceanic lithosphere. We hypothesize that subsurface fluid-rock-microbe interactions resulted in more efficient hydration of the early oceanic crust, which in turn promoted bulk melting to produce the first evolved fragments of felsic crust. These evolved magmas most likely included sialic or tonalitic sheets, felsic volcaniclastics, and minor rhyolitic intrusions emplaced in an Iceland-type extensional setting as the earliest microcontinents. With the further development of proto-tectonic processes, these buoyant felsic crustal fragments formed the nucleus of intra-oceanic tonalite-trondhjemite-granitoid (TTG) island arcs. Thus microbes, by facilitating extensive hydrothermal alteration of the earliest oceanic crust through bioalteration, promoted mineral diversification and may have been early architects of surface environments and microcontinents on young Earth. We explore how the possible onset of subseafloor fluid-rock-microbe interactions on early Earth accelerated metavolcanic clay mineral formation, crustal melting, and subsequent metamorphic mineral evolution. We also consider environmental factors supporting this earliest step in geosphere-biosphere coevolution and the implications for habitability and mineral evolution on other rocky planets, such as Mars.

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Year:  2015        PMID: 26430911     DOI: 10.1089/ast.2015.1302

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Astrobiology        ISSN: 1557-8070            Impact factor:   4.335


  5 in total

1.  Habitability on Early Mars and the Search for Biosignatures with the ExoMars Rover.

Authors:  Jorge L Vago; Frances Westall; Andrew J Coates; Ralf Jaumann; Oleg Korablev; Valérie Ciarletti; Igor Mitrofanov; Jean-Luc Josset; Maria Cristina De Sanctis; Jean-Pierre Bibring; Fernando Rull; Fred Goesmann; Harald Steininger; Walter Goetz; William Brinckerhoff; Cyril Szopa; François Raulin; Frances Westall; Howell G M Edwards; Lyle G Whyte; Alberto G Fairén; Jean-Pierre Bibring; John Bridges; Ernst Hauber; Gian Gabriele Ori; Stephanie Werner; Damien Loizeau; Ruslan O Kuzmin; Rebecca M E Williams; Jessica Flahaut; François Forget; Jorge L Vago; Daniel Rodionov; Oleg Korablev; Håkan Svedhem; Elliot Sefton-Nash; Gerhard Kminek; Leila Lorenzoni; Luc Joudrier; Viktor Mikhailov; Alexander Zashchirinskiy; Sergei Alexashkin; Fabio Calantropio; Andrea Merlo; Pantelis Poulakis; Olivier Witasse; Olivier Bayle; Silvia Bayón; Uwe Meierhenrich; John Carter; Juan Manuel García-Ruiz; Pietro Baglioni; Albert Haldemann; Andrew J Ball; André Debus; Robert Lindner; Frédéric Haessig; David Monteiro; Roland Trautner; Christoph Voland; Pierre Rebeyre; Duncan Goulty; Frédéric Didot; Stephen Durrant; Eric Zekri; Detlef Koschny; Andrea Toni; Gianfranco Visentin; Martin Zwick; Michel van Winnendael; Martín Azkarate; Christophe Carreau
Journal:  Astrobiology       Date:  2017-07-01       Impact factor: 4.335

2.  Editorial: Geomicrobes: Life in Terrestrial Deep Subsurface.

Authors:  Malin Bomberg; Lasse Ahonen
Journal:  Front Microbiol       Date:  2017-01-31       Impact factor: 5.640

3.  The Dallol Geothermal Area, Northern Afar (Ethiopia)-An Exceptional Planetary Field Analog on Earth.

Authors:  B Cavalazzi; R Barbieri; F Gómez; B Capaccioni; K Olsson-Francis; M Pondrelli; A P Rossi; K Hickman-Lewis; A Agangi; G Gasparotto; M Glamoclija; G G Ori; N Rodriguez; M Hagos
Journal:  Astrobiology       Date:  2019-01-17       Impact factor: 4.335

4.  Fungal hyphae develop where titanomagnetite inclusions reach the surface of basalt grains.

Authors:  Rebecca A Lybrand; Odeta Qafoku; Mark E Bowden; Michael F Hochella; Libor Kovarik; Daniel E Perea; Nikolla P Qafoku; Paul A Schroeder; Mark G Wirth; Dragos G Zaharescu
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2022-03-01       Impact factor: 4.379

5.  A Hydrothermal-Sedimentary Context for the Origin of Life.

Authors:  F Westall; K Hickman-Lewis; N Hinman; P Gautret; K A Campbell; J G Bréhéret; F Foucher; A Hubert; S Sorieul; A V Dass; T P Kee; T Georgelin; A Brack
Journal:  Astrobiology       Date:  2018-02-28       Impact factor: 4.335

  5 in total

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