Coventry Telegraph

Research pushes land plant history back 100m years

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the age for the first known terrestria­l animals.”

The “molecular clock” method is based on the premise that certain genetic mutations accumulate at a predictabl­e rate over time. By extrapolat­ing back, they can be used to work out when life-forms diverged into different species.

The new findings have implicatio­ns for climate modelling. Plants play a major role in the chemical weathering of continenta­l rocks. sparse and incomplete to be a reliable guide to date the origin of land plants.

“Instead of relying on the fossil record alone, we used a ‘molecular clock’ approach to compare difference­s in the make-up of genes of living species . These relative genetic difference­s were then converted into ages by using the fossil ages as a loose framework.

“Our results show the ancestor of land plants was alive in the middle Cambrian Period, which was similar to animals to crawl out of the sea.

Previously, scientists working out the timetable of life on Earth relied on the most ancient plant fossils, which are about 420 million years old.

The new study, published in the journal Proceeding­s of the National Academy of Sciences, used “molecular clock” techniques to provide a more accurate record.

Mark Puttick, from the University of Bristol, said: “The fossil record is too PLANTS colonised the continents 100 million years earlier than previously thought, new research has shown.

Scientists now believe the first plants adapted to terrestria­l life appeared around 500 million years ago.

Until then, for the first four billion years of Earth’s history, nothing would have lived on the land except microbes.

The greening of the continents transforme­d the planet and paved the way for the first primitive land

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