Abstract

Abstract The Precambrian rock record contains numerous examples of microscopic organic filaments and spheres, commonly interpreted as fossil microorganisms. Microfossils are among the oldest traces of life on Earth, making their correct identification crucial to our understanding of early evolution. Yet, spherical and filamentous microscopic objects composed of organic carbon and sulfur can form in the abiogenic reaction of sulfide with organic compounds. Termed organic biomorphs, these objects form under geochemical conditions relevant to the sulfidic environments of early Earth. Furthermore, they adopt a diversity of morphologies that closely mimic a number of microfossil examples from the Precambrian record. Here, we tested the potential for organic biomorphs to be preserved in cherts; i.e., siliceous rocks hosting abundant microbial fossils. We performed experimental silicification of the biomorphs along with the sulfur bacterium Thiothrix. We show that the original morphologies of the biomorphs are well preserved through encrustation by nano-colloidal silica, while the shapes of Thiothrix cells degrade. Sulfur diffuses from the interior of both biomorphs and Thiothrix during silicification, leaving behind empty organic envelopes. Although the organic composition of the biomorphs differs from that of Thiothrix cells, both types of objects present similar nitrogen/carbon ratios after silicification. During silicification, sulfur accumulates along the organic envelopes of the biomorphs, which may promote sulfurization and preservation through diagenesis. Organic biomorphs possessing morphological and chemical characteristics of microfossils may thus be an important component in Precambrian cherts, challenging our understanding of the early life record.

Highlights

  • Reconstructing the early history of life onEarth relies on our ability to identify the remnants of microorganisms in the rock record

  • Samples were collected at different times during silicification and characterized using scanning electron microscopy (SEM) and transmission electron microscopy (TEM) coupled with energy-dispersive X-ray spectroscopy (EDS), Raman spectromicroscopy, attenuated total reflectance–Fourier transform infrared spectroscopy (ATR-FTIR), X-ray absorption near-edge structure (XANES)

  • Organic biomorphs that form via the abiogenic reaction of sulfide with organics are likely to be preserved as pseudofossils in cherts through rapid silica encrustation and, possibly, organic-matter sulfurization

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Summary

Introduction

Reconstructing the early history of life onEarth relies on our ability to identify the remnants of microorganisms in the rock record. Organic microstructures bearing both morphological and chemical resemblance to microbial filamentous and spherical cells were synthesized experimentally (Cosmidis and Templeton, 2016). These objects, called here organic biomorphs, selfassemble when sulfide is oxidized in the presence of organics. They form spontaneously in a wide range of geochemical conditions relevant to modern and ancient sulfidic environments. The organic biomorphs form from diverse organic compounds, including simple prebiotic organics (e.g., glycine) (Cosmidis et al, 2019), and so possibly assembled in Earth’s early environments prior to the origin of life

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