How Bad Was The Great Oxidation Event?

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Shit that was 2.4 billion years ago already? Time really Flies...

👍︎︎ 9 👤︎︎ u/ChalupaCabre 📅︎︎ Mar 05 2021 🗫︎ replies
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[Music] all across the earth the history of life and of the planet itself is written in its rocks [Music] fossils large and small are embedded in rocks layered on top of each other and by traversing these layers now exposed at the surface paleontologists can take a trip through time traveling back about 66 million years rock layers all over the world preserve a remarkable transition from a world ruled by giants to one reeling from their sudden absence rock layers older than 66 million years belong to the cretaceous period the third and final age of dinosaurs improbably huge fossils are the remains of improbably gigantic creatures that roamed the land surface and ocean depths grazing hunting living every conceivable lifestyle on this ancient earth but the rocks younger than 66 million years tell a very different story here at the beginning of the paleogene the fossils are vastly diminished both in number and in size they tell of a world devoid of dinosaurs stripped of its giants entirely no four-legged animal weighing more than 25 kilos lives in this new world they are mostly small among which are our own ancestors and it is a quiet empty world in which just 25 of cretaceous species remain this is the cretaceous paleogene boundary a line frozen between worlds an armageddon marked in stone unimaginably catastrophic first posited by father and son team walter and luis alvarez in 1980 the alvarez hypothesis is a symbol of how brutal life on our planet can be in 1979 with hammer and chisel they had extracted and examined a sample of the cretaceous paleogene border in the italian aponines half of the fist-sized rock belonging to the age of the dinosaurs and the other to a world of small mammals through the middle of it a fine dark wavering line was the only remnant of a catastrophic event that had ended the dinosaur's reign in that delicate layer walter and lewis discovered inflated concentrations of iridium a metal that's extremely rare on earth but which they theorized was delivered by an asteroid 66 million years ago an 80 kilometer wide asteroid smashed into the yucatan peninsula in mexico obliterating itself in the process and spreading iridium in a fine layer over the entire globe it triggered a string of catastrophic climatic and tectonic changes that in a mere 30 000 years decimated life on earth dinosaurs died never to return along with 75 of all species on the planet the living world was utterly transformed and yet this brutal impact and its subsequent horrors were nowhere near the worst mass extinction event the earth had seen [Music] nearly 200 million years deeper in time at the end of the permian period earth's biodiversity plummeted in a geological blink of the eye this time there was no external agent of destruction the earth itself conspired to call forth its armageddon huge volcanic eruptions spewed lava dust clouds and gases transforming the planet the changes drove ancient species from many different families to extinction including trilobites ammonites and some of the earliest land-dwelling mammals and reptiles 96 of all marine species and 70 percent of terrestrial vertebrates were lost known colloquially as the great dying this has been widely held as the most deadly of earth's many extinction events but there is one more candidate for this grisly crown billions of years deeper in time the evidence may not be as clear as the boundary rock walter alvarez held in his hand but much much closer to the formation of our world there is record of an event so catastrophic that it almost saw the loss of all life on earth [Music] in the archaean world at least two and a half billion years ago the microbial ecosystem thrives in blissful ignorance of the coming apocalypse life is limited to diverse bacteria clusters around hydrothermal vents peppering the ocean floor feeding off the various minerals disgorged from these smoking chimneys but these are crowded microcosms these microbes can only stray so far from the life-giving chemistry on which their metabolisms rely and the hydrothermal chimneys can only supply so much so new metabolisms emerge through mutations of the genetic molecule the bacteria learn to do new things with the chemicals they're surrounded with not only that but they can exchange their newfound skills with their sisters in a genetic handshake of which only these simple life forms are capable bumping against each other gently in the crowded vent metropolis two microbes can briefly link their membranes and shuttle tiny packets of genetic material back and forth constantly trading genes and creating new combinations within their own cells this was the source of staggering diversity in these gloomy seas and the mechanism that birthed an entirely new innovation one that was to ultimately transform the face of the planet [Music] that innovation was of pigments tiny specks that would appear purple to our eyes but which are capable of absorbing specific wavelengths of light and capturing the energy suddenly microbial life forms have a brand new source of energy available to them the light from the sun sunlight is inexhaustible and easily accessible as long as you can survive the waves and tides that haunt the shallows to the first light-loving microbes in a chemical world their innovation opened the doors to a brand new kind of existence these photo troughs could eat the sun this was the birth of photosynthesis but it wasn't the photosynthesis we learn about in school it was a strange noxious kind of chemistry with exotic ingredients purple colored bacteria fed on the sun's infrared light beyond the visible spectrum they used hydrogen and dissolved sulfides to complete their reactions and produced solid yellow sulfur and corrosive sulfuric acid as by-products the early photosynthetic world was a toxic stinking mire but this wasn't the cause of the catastrophe to come even after bacteria learned to eat the sun innovation continued through the microbial gene exchange and much trial and error iterative improvements were made to the new metabolism new green pigments absorb red and blue light capturing more energy than ever before and a new simpler kind of chemistry is developed one that relies not on noxious sulfur but on ubiquitous water in this new and improved form of photosynthesis the sun's energy is combined with carbon dioxide and water to power cells metabolism this is the successful pathway that has been handed down through billions of years and upon which green plants and algae rely to this day but this wildly successful new pathway had a dark side it created a waste product more deadly and noxious than any sulfur that came before a toxic waste product that would bring disaster even to the organisms that made it and one we are still living with today oxygen [Music] oxygen may not seem so terrible to us indeed we can scarcely imagine a world without it every animal on earth today relies on oxygen for its own metabolism but in the late archaean and early proterozoic two and a half billion years ago it was a novelty to which the entire planet was unaccustomed [Music] in september 1844 the southern shores of lake superior were a wilderness of hardy white pines casting long shadows over a softly undulating landscape of ice-smoothed rock a small team of prospectors are working their way through this landscape led by one william burt he is a geologist and surveyor sent to the northern peninsula of michigan to seek out new metal oars michigan already has a thriving copper industry and investors seek to exploit ever more of the state's natural bounty so late one september afternoon as the sun casts a golden glow over the landscape william burt squints and peers at his compass something isn't right the sun in his eyes tells him he's facing west but the compass needle points straight ahead he turns to the north to look across the glittering waters of the lake but the needle still points resolutely into the hillside at bert's instruction the surveyors set up camp here and begin their investigations to discover the cause of the compass's strange behavior several days of digging hacking and blasting later the prospectors stand before a clean unweathered rock surface the likes of which a small team has never seen the rocks are vivid red and jet black strikingly arranged in smoothly alternating layers some mere millimeters thick others half as tall as a man later testing will reveal that iron makes up more than thirty percent of these rocks compared to just five percent on average in the earth's crust with little more than a compass needle william burt had struck michigan's black stony gold these iron rich rocks would come to be known as banded iron formations and they would bring michigan steaming into the industrial revolution [Music] but banded iron formations have more to offer than just their mineral resources these rocks now exploited in northern michigan were birthed in the proterozoic oceans 2.4 billion years ago they are the lucrative product of a world in crisis with the invention of water-based photosynthesis oxygen was being produced and emitted into the oceans for the first time in earth's history oxygen is a remarkably reactive element and will instantly combine with almost any other element creating brand new compounds in the proterozoic oceans the newly created oxygen reacts with the green iron hydroxide suspended through the water column transforming it into iron oxide rust spreading out from the shores where the photosynthetic bacteria thrive the waters turn an apocalyptic blood red over time the iron oxide settles floating down through miles of water to be deposited on the ocean floor they become the crimson iron-rich layers in the banded iron formations but a curious thing is happening in the shallows while the first innovative microbes may have evolved to use the efficient new form of photosynthesis they haven't yet evolved a resistance to oxygen without protection the waste product builds up in their cells reacting aggressively with the delicate chemical machinery that keeps them alive the microbes have no protection because they've never needed it until now so these new bacteria are suffocated by their own waste gases dying in droves just as they reach the peak of their success when populations grow too large the flow of oxygen in the ocean exceeds what can be removed by iron and the entire shallows are oxygenated the toxic oxygen sweeps like poison gas over the bacterial communities lying prostrate in the sun killing them where they lie with the sun-loving microbes slaughtered oxygen production all but stops and normal service resumes in the ocean depths muddy shales and silica rich cherts accumulate free of iron oxide covering the red sediments but the oxygenic cleansing isn't absolute not all photosynthetic bacteria are wiped out life finds a way microbes find their way back to the dappled coastal waters their populations bounce back and they begin to pour oxygen back into the ocean once again and so the cycle repeats millions of years of blooming and dying of oxygen levels rising and falling of red iron oxides alternating with black anoxic silicates gradually pulse by pulse the banded iron formations accumulate they are an elegant deep sea record of a bitter battle for survival in the shallows [Music] banded iron formations like the ones discovered by william burt in michigan are found today on almost every continent they formed across huge swathes of the deep proterozoic ocean and record pulsing oxygen levels lasting 200 million years but this is just the beginning of the oxygen catastrophe to come geologists examining the rocks of the earliest proterozoic notice a striking transition around 2.4 billion years ago the black basild and its black sands and black muddy riverbeds for the first time turn red the phenomenon is more widespread than just the deep sea banded iron formations this is a transformation that took over the entire globe around 2.4 billion years ago the earth rusted but how did this happen how did the photosynthetic micro cosmos break out of its seemingly endless boom and bust cycle with enough time the photosynthesizers have chance to innovate exchange and evolve eventually they evolved to withstand their own waste gases oxygen no longer poisoned them straight away they could live long enough to grow their numbers bolster their population and maintain their tenuous grip on the sun-lit shallows without periodic devastation they could soak up the sun and belch out oxygen uninhibited before long the seas ran out of iron to soak up the excess oxygen bringing about the end of widespread banded iron formations oxygen begins to fill the oceans dissolved in the water beginning at the shore and spreading inexorably into the darkest depths ocean currents bring tons of oxygenated water into the furthest reaches of the proterozoic oceans oxygen silent deadly spread is catastrophic for the rest of the biosphere those crowded microbial communities clinging to hydrothermal chimneys in the dark never change their ways they never exchange their genes with sun lovers and they have no resistance to toxic oxygen they are decimated even those that survive the initial cull are deprived of the chemicals on which they depend oxygen reacts with iron sulfur and manganese emitted from the vent oxidizing it and locking it away in deposits now inaccessible to these primitive microbes as oxygen spreads through the ocean so microbial city after city fall gassed poisoned starved and rusted to death there was no escape the photosynthesizers had brought about a new world order in which there was only room for those tolerant to their regime but even this was not the end the thin layer of iridium that walter alvarez and his father discovered in italy in 1980 was a record of the asteroid that started the kt extinction the impact obliterated everything for miles around sent shockwaves around the globe started forest fires and filled the skies with smoke but for the majority of the biosphere death came much slower during a global winter that gripped the planet for years after or during intense warming that followed it was the climatic after effects that dealt the final blow so too with the great proterozoic extinction [Music] in 1868 just over the canadian border from the then thriving iron mines in northern michigan exploring geologists discover another curious rock formation on the shores of lake huron here they uncover a strange amalgam of pebbles and boulders set in a fine gray cement-like matrix from tiny gritty grains to boulders weighing several tons the stones are a colorful assortment of many different rock types speckled white and gray granites striped orange jaspers and greenstone glinting in the sun there are no matching source rocks for these exotic pieces for hundreds even thousands of miles the largest boulders are too heavy to be moved by wind or water to the 19th century geologists their presence here is a mystery it is as if they have been dropped from the sky today we know many more examples of these mysterious exotic rocks from later periods of earth's history they are called erratics and they are indeed dropped although not from the sky rather from melting glaciers pebbles and boulders are plucked from the bedrock and transported along vast icy highways before being deposited unceremoniously when that ice melts away only the unstoppable progress of ice has the power to move so much rock so far from its source the erratics around lake huron are exceptional in both their age and their variety dating to at least 2.1 billion years ago they are the remnants of not just one glacier but a vast ice field transporting debris across thousands of miles the so-called huronian glaciation named for these deposits was an ice age like no other it was the ice catastrophe that followed the oxygen catastrophe and the nail in the coffin for much of life on earth the seas filled with oxygen and wiped out the deep sea microbial communities but the photosynthetic communities continued to thrive pumping out more and more oxygen until the seas could hold no more so the waste oxygen began to eek into the atmosphere here it reacted with exposed rocks but it also reacted with other gases in the air most notably it tore apart molecules of methane transforming them into carbon dioxide and while we know carbon dioxide today to be a warming greenhouse gas on the early earth methane was a much more potent insulator as the skies were stripped of their downy methane blanket global temperatures dropped the greedy surviving photosynthesizers continued to gobble at the carbon dioxide in the atmosphere depleting the planet's insulation even more the earth was then plunged into an ice age of unimaginable proportions the sun shone less brightly than today and with the planet losing what little heat it once retained the lakes rivers and oceans began to freeze ice shelves edged towards the equator spreading like freezing corruption from the shallows over the deep oceans before long the earth was a snowball planet head to toe in a cloak of featureless ice and so it remained for 300 million years with every continental shelf frozen solid covered by ice a hundred meters thick even the voracious photosynthesizers met their match the shallow sea floor froze solid entombing microbial communities in solid ice deeper water that escaped the freeze was black as night below the thick opaque ice for microbes that eat the sun this endless night was an inescapable death sentence after reaping devastation on the archaic life forms in the deep ocean they are eventually the very agents of their own destruction together the chemical revolution and the ensuing climate crisis combined to bring about the biggest mass extinction that the earth has ever seen it's often overlooked in the face of more recent extinctions where staggering numbers of species are lost or huge charismatic animals like the dinosaurs disappear forever but the great oxygen extinction saw primary productivity the production of organic compounds by life plummet scientists estimate that 99 of all life on earth was lost between 2.4 and 2 billion years ago the bountiful microbial oceans of the archaean were wiped out forever and the majority of those ocean ecosystems would never recover just one percent of life clung on through the toxic ice age deep ocean refuge untouched by the poison gas or in rare warm coastline oases that somehow escaped the global freeze all life on earth today is descended from those lucky few who made it against the odds oxygenic photosynthesis a chemical innovation made by tiny bacteria nearly two and a half billion years ago is the fundamental root of most of our modern ecosystems and yet its invention almost brought about the destruction of all life on earth [Music] you've been watching the entire history of the earth like and 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Channel: History of the Earth
Views: 1,342,771
Rating: 4.9020238 out of 5
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Length: 26min 49sec (1609 seconds)
Published: Sun Dec 20 2020
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