comparemela.com


 E-Mail
Step into your new, microscopic time machine. Scientists at the University of Colorado Boulder have discovered that a type of single-celled organism living in modern-day oceans may have a lot in common with life forms that existed billions of years ago--and that fundamentally transformed the planet.
The new research, which will appear Jan. 6 in the journal
Science Advances, is the latest to probe the lives of what may be nature's hardest working microbes: cyanobacteria.
These single-celled, photosynthetic organisms, also known as "blue-green algae," can be found in almost any large body of water today. But more than 2 billion years ago, they took on an extra important role in the history of life on Earth: During a period known as the "Great Oxygenation Event," ancient cyanobacteria produced a sudden, and dramatic, surge in oxygen gas.

Related Keywords

Colorado ,United States ,Boulder ,Claire Jasper ,Jeffrey Cameron ,Nicholas Hill ,Sarah Hurley ,Geological Sciences ,University Of Colorado Boulder ,Colorado Boulder ,Science Advances ,Oxygenation Event ,Great Oxidation Event ,Boswell Wing ,Great Oxygenation Event ,கொலராடோ ,ஒன்றுபட்டது மாநிலங்களில் ,கற்பாறை ,கிளாரி ஜாஸ்பர் ,ஜெஃப்ரி கேமரூன் ,நிக்கோலஸ் மலை ,சாரா ஹர்லி ,புவியியல் அறிவியல் ,பல்கலைக்கழகம் ஆஃப் கொலராடோ கற்பாறை ,கொலராடோ கற்பாறை ,நன்று ஆக்ஸைடேஶந் நிகழ்வு ,போஸ்வெல் சாரி ,

© 2024 Vimarsana

comparemela.com © 2020. All Rights Reserved.