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04/06/2023 13:31

Ancient Magma Reveals Signs of Life

Marietta Fuhrmann-Koch Kommunikation und Marketing
Universität Heidelberg

    Zircon crystals, like a time capsule, can preserve traces of life hundreds of millions of years old in the form of biogenic carbon. Using new methods, geoscientists at Heidelberg University have succeeded in tracing very old and rare examples of the mineral zircon that host graphite inclusions in which light carbon is identifiable as a remnant of earlier life. According to the researchers, this opens up new possibilities for research into our planet's early period for which neither fossils nor sediments have been preserved in their original form.

    Press Release
    Heidelberg, 6 April 2023

    Ancient Magma Reveals Signs of Life
    Heidelberg geoscientists develop new methods to identify biogenic carbon in zircon minerals

    Zircon mineral grains form from magma, i.e. melted rock, in an extremely hot and intrinsically hostile environment. Yet heated remnants of organisms were converted to carbon dioxide and methane gases and deposited as graphite in the mineral zircon at approximately 700°C. “The special isotopic signature of biogenic carbon remains largely preserved in most inclusions and leaves behind a kind of fingerprint of earlier life forms”, explains the study's lead author Dr Manfred Vogt at the Institute of Earth Sciences at Heidelberg University.

    Taking the measurements is extremely demanding, emphasise the researchers. First, intact graphite inclusions, some measuring just a few micrometres and thus a hundred times finer than a human hair, must be found and identified within zircon crystals. To exclude contamination with carbon from the environment, non-destructive Raman microspectroscopy is used to examine the encapsulated inclusions in place in the zircons. Next, the zircons are bombarded with an ion beam to expose the graphite inclusions so that their carbon isotopic composition can be analysed. "In this process, we can remove only a few nanometres of thick carbon layers and measure them individually, thus obtaining many data points for a single inclusion to detect possible variations", explains Dr Winfried Schwarz, a participant in the study.

    Zircons are among the oldest minerals on Earth, some older than four billion years. “They can teach us about well over 96 percent of the Earth's history. For the first hundred million years, these crystals represent the only known record holding information on very early conditions on the planet. Inclusions in these oldest zircons have already revealed that water and oceans existed on Earth early on, as well as movements of the continental plates”, explains Dr Vogt.

    The results of the research were published in “Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta”. Two researchers from the University of California, Los Angeles (USA), also contributed to the work, which was funded by the German Research Foundation and the Klaus Tschira Foundation.

    Contact:
    Communications and Marketing
    Press Office
    Phone +49 6221 54-2311
    presse@rektorat.uni-heidelberg.de


    Contact for scientific information:

    Prof. Dr Mario Trieloff
    Institute of Earth Sciences
    Phone +49 6221 54-6022
    mario.trieloff@geow.uni-heidelberg.de


    Original publication:

    M. Vogt, W. Schwarz, A.K. Schmitt, J. Schmitt, M. Trieloff, M. Harrison, E. Bell: Graphitic Inclusions in Zircon from Early Phanerozoic S-type Granite: Implications for the Preservation of Hadean Biosignatures. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta (published online 29 March 2023); https://doi.org/10.1016/j.gca.2023.03.022


    More information:

    https://www.geow.uni-heidelberg.de/researchgroups/trieloff/index.html


    Images

    Opened graphite inclusion in zircon after ion bombardment, image taken with scanning electron microscope
    Opened graphite inclusion in zircon after ion bombardment, image taken with scanning electron micros ...

    Winfried Schwarz, Heidelberg University, Institute of Earth Sciences


    Criteria of this press release:
    Journalists
    Chemistry, Geosciences
    transregional, national
    Research results, Scientific Publications
    English


     

    Opened graphite inclusion in zircon after ion bombardment, image taken with scanning electron microscope


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