Science

Revealing Earth’s Oldest Ecosystem On Land, Rhynie, Aberdeenshire.

Plant fossils in north-east Scotland have revealed the oldest evidence of how natural processes have helped clean the environment since life first colonised the land over 400 million years ago.

polished section through round plant stems, preserved by petrification in a hot spring, Rhynie, Aberdeenshire, 400 million years ago. Fine detail includes dark circles beneath the surface of stems, left by fungi colonising the plants, just as fungi live with plants today. Fungi helped remove toxic materials from the spring water. Image 4 cm across (Image credit T. Akinsanpe)

Known as the Rhynie Chert, the exquisitely detailed plants, spiders, fungi and other life were preserved by hot springs about 410 million years ago.

The hot springs also introduced toxic elements like arsenic, antimony and tungsten, but new research has shown that these toxic metals were soaked up by minerals that were deposited among the plants, with the aid of bacteria and fungi, limiting their impact on the environment.

Professor John Parnell from the University’s School of Geosciences led the study which has been published in the Geochemistry, Geophysics, Geosystems journal.

He commented:

“This study is the first examination of the distribution of toxic elements in the Rhynie ecosystem.

“While there are no exposed rocks at Rhynie, the University has a valuable archive of samples from trenches and boreholes, which we analysed at the Aberdeen Centre for Electron Microscopy, Analysis and Characterisation in this study.

“Today, fungi are used to remediate land contaminated by harmful metals but the evidence from Rhynie shows how natural processes have helped clean the environment since life first colonised the land.

 “Researchers at the University have studied the Rhynie Chert closely over several decades, including analysis of the earliest plants and mineralization by gold from the hot springs.

“This latest research is another chapter in the ongoing story of this globally important deposit, which continues to provide valuable insights into how the Earth behaves.”

polished section through round plant stems, preserved by petrification in a hot spring, Rhynie, Aberdeenshire, 400 million years ago. Fine detail includes dark circles beneath the surface of stems, left by fungi colonising the plants, just as fungi live with plants today. Fungi helped remove toxic materials from the spring water. Image 4 cm across (Image credit T. Akinsanpe)

Click on this link to access the report, Trace Element Geochemistry in the Earliest Terrestrial Ecosystem, the Rhynie Chert published in Advancing Earth and Space Science,

Click here for more about the Rhynie Chert

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