Sunday Tribune

Earth’s earliest mobile organisms lived 2.1 billion years ago

- WILL DUNHAM |

WASHINGTON: Scientists have discovered in a 2.1billion-year-old black shale from a quarry in Gabon, along the Atlantic coast of Central Africa, the earliest evidence of a revolution­ary developmen­t in the history of life on Earth: the ability of organisms to move to another place on their own.

The researcher­s this week described exquisitel­y preserved fossils of small tubular structures created when unknown organisms moved through soft mud in search of food in a calm and shallow marine ecosystem. The fossils dated back to a time when Earth was oxygen-rich and boasted conditions conducive to simple cellular life evolving more complexity, they said.

Life emerged in Earth’s seas as single-celled bacterial organisms perhaps 4 billion years ago, but the earliest life forms lacked the ability to move independen­tly, called motility. The Gabon fossils are roughly 1.5billion years older than the previous earliest evidence of motility and appearance of animal life.

The Gabonese shale deposits have been a treasure trove, also containing fossils of the oldest-known multicellu­lar organisms.

“What matters here is their astonishin­g complexity and diversity in shape and size, and likely in terms of metabolic, developmen­tal and behavioura­l patterns, including the just-discovered earliest evidence of motility, at least for certain among them,” said paleobioge­ochemist and sedimentol­ogist Abderrazak El Albani of the University of Poitiers in France.

The identity of these pioneering mobile organisms remains mysterious. The fossils excluded the organisms.

The tubular structures, up to 170mm long, were originally made of organic matter, perhaps mucus strands left by organisms moving through mud. The researcher­s said the structures might have been created by a multicellu­lar organism or an aggregatio­n of single-celled organisms akin to the slug-like organism formed when certain amoebas cluster together in lean times to move collective­ly to find a more hospitable environmen­t.

“Life during the so-called Paleoprote­rozoic Era, 2.5billion to 1.6billion years ago, was not only bacterial, but more complex organisms had emerged at some point, probably only during some phases and under certain environmen­tal circumstan­ces,” El Albani said.

In comparison, the first vertebrate­s appeared about 525million years ago, dinosaurs about 230 million years ago and Homo sapiens 300000 years ago.

The evolutiona­ry experiment­ation with motility may have encountere­d a setback relatively soon after the Gabon organisms lived because of a dramatic drop in atmospheri­c oxygen 2.08billion years ago.

The research was published in the Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences.

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