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Early photosynthetic microorganisms and environmental evolutionMicrofossils which are preserved as shrivelled kerogenous residues provide little information about cellular organization and almost none about the metabolic properties of the organisms. The distinction between prokaryotic vs eukaryotic, and phototrophic vs chemo- and organotrophic fossil microorganisms rests entirely on morphological comparisons with recent counterparts. The residual nature of the microbial fossil record promotes the conclusion that it must be biased toward (a) most abundant organisms, (b) those most resistant to degradation, and (c) those inhabiting environments with high preservation potential e.g., stromatolites. These criteria support the cyanophyte identity of most Precambrian microbial fossils on the following grounds: (1) as primary producers they dominate prokaryotic communities in modern extreme environments, e.g., intertidal zone; (2) several morphological counterparts of modern cyanophytes and microbial fossils have been established based on structure, cell division patterns and degradation sequences. The impact of anaerobic and oxygenic microbial photosynthesis on the evolution of Precambrian environments is discussed.
Document ID
19800065892
Acquisition Source
Legacy CDMS
Document Type
Conference Proceedings
Authors
Golubic, S.
(Boston University Boston, Mass., United States)
Date Acquired
August 10, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 1980
Subject Category
Space Biology
Meeting Information
Meeting: Life sciences and space research. Volume 18
Location: Bangalore
Country: India
Start Date: May 29, 1979
End Date: June 9, 1979
Accession Number
80A50062
Funding Number(s)
CONTRACT_GRANT: NSG-7588
CONTRACT_GRANT: NSF GA-43391
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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