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Photosynthesis got a really early start

By Katharine Davis

2 October 2004

THE case for the existence of photosynthetic life 3.4 billion years ago has been significantly strengthened. The new evidence, which comes from a layer of carbonaceous rock in South Africa, is certain to fuel the controversy about when exactly such life began on Earth.

In 2002, Martin Brasier from the University of Oxford and his colleagues disputed claims that microscopic patterns found in 3.5-billion-year-old rock in Western Australia were microfossils of various bacteria, including photosynthetic cyanobacteria. Brasier claimed the fossils were really patterns formed during the recrystallisation of volcanic glass from a hydrothermal vent that formed tens of metres under…

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