Two-way feedback between biology and deep Earth processes: AGU2012 P14A-07

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Two-way feedback between biology and deep Earth processes : AGU2012 P14A-07. / Sleep, Norman; Bird, Dennis K.; Pope, Emily Catherine.

2012. Abstract fra American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, San Francisco, USA.

Publikation: KonferencebidragKonferenceabstrakt til konferenceForskning

Harvard

Sleep, N, Bird, DK & Pope, EC 2012, 'Two-way feedback between biology and deep Earth processes: AGU2012 P14A-07', American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, San Francisco, USA, 03/12/2012 - 07/12/2012. <http://abstractsearch.agu.org/meetings/2012/FM/sections/P/sessions/P14A/abstracts/P14A-07.html>

APA

Sleep, N., Bird, D. K., & Pope, E. C. (2012). Two-way feedback between biology and deep Earth processes: AGU2012 P14A-07. Abstract fra American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, San Francisco, USA. http://abstractsearch.agu.org/meetings/2012/FM/sections/P/sessions/P14A/abstracts/P14A-07.html

Vancouver

Sleep N, Bird DK, Pope EC. Two-way feedback between biology and deep Earth processes: AGU2012 P14A-07. 2012. Abstract fra American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, San Francisco, USA.

Author

Sleep, Norman ; Bird, Dennis K. ; Pope, Emily Catherine. / Two-way feedback between biology and deep Earth processes : AGU2012 P14A-07. Abstract fra American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, San Francisco, USA.1 s.

Bibtex

@conference{3f5de812351747349a0bfad9f9d0e071,
title = "Two-way feedback between biology and deep Earth processes: AGU2012 P14A-07",
abstract = "The presence of the metamorphic products of banded iron formation and black shale indicate that the Earth teemed with life by the time of the earliest preserved rocks, ca. 3.85 Ga. Iron and sulfur-based anoxygenic photosynthesis with full carbon cycles was present by this time. The pH of the ocean was ~8. The lack of older rock record cloaks pre-biotic evolution and the origin of life. Nascent and early life obtained energy from chemical disequilibria in rocks rather than sunlight. Appraising putative rock pre-biological environments is difficult in that life has modified the composition of the atmosphere, the hydrosphere, and sedimentary rocks. It has greatly affected the composition of crystalline crustal rocks and measurably modified the mantle. Conversely, hard crustal rocks and the mantle likely sequester a very ancient record of last resort. Theory provides additional insight. The Earth{\textquoteright}s surface and interior cooled following the moon-forming impact. The oceans passed through conditions favored by thermophile organisms before becoming clement. Ocean pH was ~6 and bars of CO2 existed in the atmosphere. Subduction removed the CO2 into the mantle before the time of rock record. Serpentinite likely existed in land, tidal, and marine environments as it does today. Seafloor spreading and arc volcanism likely drove hydrothermal circulation. The late heavy bombardment occurred after ca. 4.1 Ga; low heat flow environments and hence habitable subsurface refugia existed. It is conceivable that one or a few ocean-boiling impacts left thermophile survivors in their wake. Overall, the molecular biology of extant life likely conserves features that relate to its earliest abodes.",
keywords = "Faculty of Science, biogeochemical cycles, processes, and modeling, geochemical cycles, origin of life, early environment of Earth",
author = "Norman Sleep and Bird, {Dennis K.} and Pope, {Emily Catherine}",
year = "2012",
language = "English",
note = "American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting, AGU2012 ; Conference date: 03-12-2012 Through 07-12-2012",

}

RIS

TY - ABST

T1 - Two-way feedback between biology and deep Earth processes

T2 - American Geophysical Union Fall Meeting

AU - Sleep, Norman

AU - Bird, Dennis K.

AU - Pope, Emily Catherine

PY - 2012

Y1 - 2012

N2 - The presence of the metamorphic products of banded iron formation and black shale indicate that the Earth teemed with life by the time of the earliest preserved rocks, ca. 3.85 Ga. Iron and sulfur-based anoxygenic photosynthesis with full carbon cycles was present by this time. The pH of the ocean was ~8. The lack of older rock record cloaks pre-biotic evolution and the origin of life. Nascent and early life obtained energy from chemical disequilibria in rocks rather than sunlight. Appraising putative rock pre-biological environments is difficult in that life has modified the composition of the atmosphere, the hydrosphere, and sedimentary rocks. It has greatly affected the composition of crystalline crustal rocks and measurably modified the mantle. Conversely, hard crustal rocks and the mantle likely sequester a very ancient record of last resort. Theory provides additional insight. The Earth’s surface and interior cooled following the moon-forming impact. The oceans passed through conditions favored by thermophile organisms before becoming clement. Ocean pH was ~6 and bars of CO2 existed in the atmosphere. Subduction removed the CO2 into the mantle before the time of rock record. Serpentinite likely existed in land, tidal, and marine environments as it does today. Seafloor spreading and arc volcanism likely drove hydrothermal circulation. The late heavy bombardment occurred after ca. 4.1 Ga; low heat flow environments and hence habitable subsurface refugia existed. It is conceivable that one or a few ocean-boiling impacts left thermophile survivors in their wake. Overall, the molecular biology of extant life likely conserves features that relate to its earliest abodes.

AB - The presence of the metamorphic products of banded iron formation and black shale indicate that the Earth teemed with life by the time of the earliest preserved rocks, ca. 3.85 Ga. Iron and sulfur-based anoxygenic photosynthesis with full carbon cycles was present by this time. The pH of the ocean was ~8. The lack of older rock record cloaks pre-biotic evolution and the origin of life. Nascent and early life obtained energy from chemical disequilibria in rocks rather than sunlight. Appraising putative rock pre-biological environments is difficult in that life has modified the composition of the atmosphere, the hydrosphere, and sedimentary rocks. It has greatly affected the composition of crystalline crustal rocks and measurably modified the mantle. Conversely, hard crustal rocks and the mantle likely sequester a very ancient record of last resort. Theory provides additional insight. The Earth’s surface and interior cooled following the moon-forming impact. The oceans passed through conditions favored by thermophile organisms before becoming clement. Ocean pH was ~6 and bars of CO2 existed in the atmosphere. Subduction removed the CO2 into the mantle before the time of rock record. Serpentinite likely existed in land, tidal, and marine environments as it does today. Seafloor spreading and arc volcanism likely drove hydrothermal circulation. The late heavy bombardment occurred after ca. 4.1 Ga; low heat flow environments and hence habitable subsurface refugia existed. It is conceivable that one or a few ocean-boiling impacts left thermophile survivors in their wake. Overall, the molecular biology of extant life likely conserves features that relate to its earliest abodes.

KW - Faculty of Science

KW - biogeochemical cycles, processes, and modeling

KW - geochemical cycles

KW - origin of life

KW - early environment of Earth

M3 - Conference abstract for conference

Y2 - 3 December 2012 through 7 December 2012

ER -

ID: 101697950