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The world's oldest fossils or oily gunk? New research suggests these 3.5 billion-year-old rocks don't contain signs of life

EconoTimes is a fast growing non-partisan source of news and intelligence on global economy and financial markets, providing timely, relevant, and critical insights for market professionals and those who want to make informed investment decisions. ....

Marble Bar , Western Australia , United States , Birger Rasmussen , William Schopf , Martin Brasier , North Pole , Science Advances , Real Time Economy News , Orex News , Igital Currency News , Conomy Research , Conomy Commentaries ,

The world's oldest fossils or oily gunk? New research suggests these 3.5 billion-year-old rocks don't contain signs of life

Saul Shepstein, Author provided The Pilbara region of Western Australia is home to one of the most ancient surviving pieces of Earth’s crust, which has been geologically unchanged since its creation some 3.5 billion ....

Marble Bar , Western Australia , United States , Saul Shepstein , William Schopf , Martin Brasier , North Pole , Science Advances ,

3.5B-Year-Old Rocks Hold No Signs of Life: Study

3.5B-Year-Old Rocks Hold No Signs of Life: Study
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Marble Bar , Western Australia , United States , William Schopf , Martin Brasier , North Pole , Science Advances ,

New clues to ancient life from billion-year-old lake fossils | Earth


May 16, 2021
Loch Torridan in Scotland’s northwest highlands. Loch is the Scottish word for lake. The newly discovered microfossils –
Bicellum brasieri – were found in ancient sediments of this lake. Image via University of Sheffield.
The beginnings of life on Earth billions of years ago, from simple single-celled organisms to more complex multicellular ones, is a widely accepted fact in science. But there are gaps or
missing links in life’s timeline, as it’s known to science. In April 2021, scientists led by Paul Strother of Boston College reported on the discovery of new microfossils in ancient Scottish lake sediments that could help fill in the gap between the earliest single-celled life and multicellular life. These scientists say these microscopic fossils could be the oldest example of complex multicellular life in the evolutionary lineage leading to animals. They say the fossils are also significant because they come – not from ocean sediments � ....

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