Posted on 10/20/2008 6:44:17 PM PDT by neverdem
Spearheading: scanning electron microscopy reveals a large magnetofossil from an unknown organism surrounded by smaller magnetofossils from bacteria.
Scientists have unearthed giant magnetic fossils, the remnants of microbes buried in 55-million-year-old sediment. The growth of these unusual structures during a period of massive global warming provides clues about how climate change might alter the behaviour of organisms.
Some bacteria, both living and fossilized, contain magnetite magnetic iron oxide crystals that the organisms are thought to use to navigate, orienting themselves along the magnetic field lines of the Earth. But the new fossils are "unlike any magnetite crystal ever described", says Dirk Schumann of McGill University in Montreal, Canada.
Schumann and his colleagues found the fossils in sediment taken from a borehole in Ancora, New Jersey. The team dissolved the sediment in water and used a magnet to extract magnetite, which they then studied under the electron microscope. They found that the magnetite crystals contained oxygen isotopes that showed they were of aquatic origin.
Here be giants
Most of the fossils were "giants" in the world of magnetite producing microorganisms, says Schumann, up to eight times as large as those previously seen. Some were up to 4 micrometres in length. Even the shapes, like spear heads and elongated diamonds, were forms that have never been seen before in the magnetite structures of fossils or living organisms. The team reports its findings in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.1
Scientists know of no microorganisms that create such large or oddly shaped magnetite crystals. Schumann says that the newly discovered crystals must have come from eukaryotes a more complex form of life than the bacteria from which most previous magnetite crystals are thought to have come. "That's a convincing argument, and these new fossils are very intriguing," says Richard Frankel, a retired California Polytechnic State University physicist in San Luis Obispo, who studied magnetite-loving bacteria.
The giant microbes may have been using their crystals for orientation. It is also possible that some used the spear-like crystals as coats of armour, says co-author Robert Kopp of Princeton University in New Jersey. A type of living snail, discovered near deep-sea vents in the Indian Ocean, uses a similar material for protection. The snail grows iron-sulphide scales over its foot, from which it can excrete toxic sulphides.
Perfect climate
The sediments in which the crystals were found dated back 55 million years, to the Paleocene-Eocene Thermal Maximum. This was a time period stretching tens of thousands of years, during which Earth's global temperature spiked abruptly by around 59° Celsius.
This suggests that major changes in climate made the conditions perfect for bigger microbes to start "loving" iron oxide, says earth scientist James Zachos at University of California, Santa Cruz. The finding backs predictions that the ecology of the coastal oceans will change in unexpected ways as temperatures rise with current global warming, he says.
To pin down the function of the crystals, the team will search for modern microorganisms that make magnetite structures of the same sizes and shapes. They might find them in tropical oceanic shelves fed by energetic river systems, such as the Amazon, where the amount of reactive iron is twice that of delta environments such as New Jersey's coast. This will tell scientists "a lot about the conditions that allowed these structures to grow in the first place", says Kopp.
LOL! How far do bacteria have to navigate to? Half an inch?
Kewl.
In the life of a bacterium, a half inch is a universe of travel. ;-)
Micro SUVs in Joisey, who’da thunk it?
Jumbo shrimp....
pardon me, but no comprehenda
>>>>microbes buried in 55-million-year-old sediment<<<<<
They had single celled organisms (Democrats) 55 Million years ago?
Who knew?!
Dr. Messmer apparently was correct!!
The northern end of the pond has more sunlight.
Hence to say, "Such events take place thanks to an irregular path" is the same as to say, "I do not know why they occur." The introduction of such lines is in no way superior to the "sympathy," "antipathy," "occult properties," "influences," and other terms employed by some philosophers as a cloak for the correct reply, which would be: "I do not know."
- Galileo, The Assayer
What don't you get, "microbes buried in 55-million-year-old sediment," or man made global warming that long ago?
Neither Snow, Nor Rain, Nor Anthrax ...
Fructose -- Found In High-fructose Corn Syrup, Sugar -- Sets Table For Weight Gain Without Warning Comments 52 & 58 also have links from me
FReepmail me if you want on or off my health and science ping list.
Very cool stuff. Always like the pings.
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If I remember correctly, there is a theory that there was a tremendous increase in atmospheric methane, which I guess would cause more methane disolved in water. I wonder if that with temperature could have caused this phenomenon? I imagine an experiment with temperature, sea water, methane and organisms could be developed. If these were eukariots (sp?) which came later than microbes, then they may have originally evolved at a time when our temperature was high and methane rich atmosphere existed.
One of the worries about global warming is that it could release a lot of arctic methane into the atmosphere. Somewhere, perhaps at FR, I saw a report that there were signs of increasing methane release in the Russian Lena River delta. This was going to be reported on at some conference in Europe in the past year. Anyone have more info on this?
I should have said the sudden increase was about 55 million years ago.
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