Fossil lipids for life-detection: A case study from the early earth record

被引:34
|
作者
Eigenbrode, Jennifer L. [1 ]
机构
[1] Carnegie Inst Sci, Geophys Lab, Washington, DC 20015 USA
关键词
lipids; molecular fossils; organic matter; preservation; alteration; extraterrestrial life; microbial ecology;
D O I
10.1007/s11214-007-9252-9
中图分类号
P1 [天文学];
学科分类号
0704 ;
摘要
The geological preservation of lipids from the cell membranes of organisms bestows a precious record of ancient life, especially for the Precambrian eon (> 542 million years ago) when Earth life was largely microbial. All organisms produce lipids that, if the lipids survive oxidative degradation, become molecular fossils entrained with information on biological diversity, environmental conditions, and post-depositional alteration history. As with most biosignatures, the molecular fossil record that is indigenous (of the same place) and syngenetic (of the same age) to host rocks can be compromised by the introduction from and reaction with foreign or younger materials (e.g., petroleum or endolithic life). Deciphering the resulting complex pool of organic signals requires tests for the provenance of molecular fossils and the overall quality of the geobiological record itself. This paper reviews the basis for the very existence of a molecular fossil record from lipid biochemistry to mechanisms of organic-matter preservation and geochemical alteration. A systematic approach to resolving the provenance of molecular fossils and historical qualities of the record is presented in a case study of an early Earth record. This example demonstrates the value of geological context and the integration of independent geobiological parameters, which are critical to the detection and understanding of the ecological processes responsible for records of life.
引用
收藏
页码:161 / 185
页数:25
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [41] False Negatives for Remote Life Detection on Ocean-Bearing Planets: Lessons from the Early Earth
    Reinhard, Christopher T.
    Olson, Stephanie L.
    Schwieterman, Edward W.
    Lyons, Timothy W.
    ASTROBIOLOGY, 2017, 17 (04) : 287 - 297
  • [42] Fossil record of Meliolaceae from India sheds new insight into its taxonomy and life cycle
    Kundu, Sampa
    Khan, Mahasin Ali
    REVIEW OF PALAEOBOTANY AND PALYNOLOGY, 2024, 329
  • [43] EVOLUTIONARY CASE-HISTORIES FROM THE FOSSIL RECORD - COPE,JCW, SKELTON,PW
    LABARBERA, M
    SCIENCE, 1986, 232 (4748) : 407 - 408
  • [44] The Shape of Life The ancient Earth was profoundly alien. How do we distinguish between the living and the nonliving in the fossil record?
    Roosth, Sophia
    AMERICAN SCIENTIST, 2018, 106 (03) : 168 - 175
  • [45] First fossil record of Bibimys Massoia, 1979 (Rodentia, Cricetidae) from the Early Holocene in Argentina
    Peralta, Matias Javier
    Ferrero, Brenda Soledad
    HISTORICAL BIOLOGY, 2024, 36 (01) : 214 - 219
  • [46] Discriminating signal from noise in the fossil record of early vertebrates reveals cryptic evolutionary history
    Sansom, Robert S.
    Randle, Emma
    Donoghue, Philip C. J.
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE ROYAL SOCIETY B-BIOLOGICAL SCIENCES, 2015, 282 (1800)
  • [47] Palaeontology meets metacommunity ecology: the Maastrichtian dinosaur fossil record of North America as a case study
    Garcia-Giron, Jorge
    Heino, Jani
    Alahuhta, Janne
    Chiarenza, Alfio Alessandro
    Brusatte, Stephen L.
    PALAEONTOLOGY, 2021, 64 (03) : 335 - 357
  • [48] The unusual sedimentary rock record of the Early Triassic: A case study from the southwestern United States
    Pruss, SB
    Corsetti, FA
    Bottjer, DJ
    PALAEOGEOGRAPHY PALAEOCLIMATOLOGY PALAEOECOLOGY, 2005, 222 (1-2) : 33 - 52
  • [49] Introducing evolution to non-biology majors via the fossil record: A case study from the Israeli high school system
    Dodick, J
    Orion, N
    AMERICAN BIOLOGY TEACHER, 2003, 65 (03): : 185 - 190
  • [50] A fossil heron from the early Oligocene of Belgium: the earliest temporally well-constrained record of the Ardeidae
    Mayr, Gerald
    De Pietri, Vanesa L.
    Scofield, Richard Paul
    Smith, Thierry
    IBIS, 2019, 161 (01) : 79 - 90