MEXICO: The Earth was a hostile environment marked by unpredictable climate and oxygen-deprived air over 3 billion years ago. Researchers of a new study, however, have claimed that regardless of these conditions, life was able to thrive on our planet during this period.
For the study, which was published in the journal Nature on Feb. 16, Roger Buick from the Department of Earth & Space Sciences and Astrobiology Program of the University of Washington, together with colleagues, analyzed some of the oldest and best-preserved rocks that were collected in northwestern Australia and South Africa.
The 52 rock samples that the researchers looked at date back from between 2.75 billion to 3.2 billion years ago and were formed before oxygen became present in the atmosphere and thus preserved the chemical clues that are not present in modern rocks.
The researchers found that there were plenty of nitrogen 3.2 billion years ago that would have sustained the most basic life forms such as viruses, bacteria and other organisms, suggesting that organisms that can pull nitrogen from the atmosphere and convert this into a usable form first emerged during this period, which is a billion years earlier than previously believed.