4.8 Article

Sulfur isotopes of organic matter preserved in 3.45-billion-year-old stromatolites reveal microbial metabolism

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1207491109

Keywords

early life; biosignature; microbe; paleontology; ion probe

Funding

  1. Caltech Center for Microanalysis
  2. Swiss National Science Foundation
  3. NASA Exobiology program

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The 3.45-billion-year-old Strelley Pool Formation of Western Australia preserves stromatolites that are considered among the oldest evidence for life on Earth. In places of exceptional preservation, these stromatolites contain laminae rich in organic carbon, interpreted as the fossil remains of ancient microbial mats. To better understand the biogeochemistry of these rocks, we performed microscale in situ sulfur isotope measurements of the preserved organic sulfur, including both Delta S-33 and Delta S-34(CDT). This approach allows us to tie physiological inference from isotope ratios directly to fossil biomass, providing a means to understand sulfur metabolism that is complimentary to, and independent from, inorganic proxies (e.g., pyrite) Delta S-33 values of the kerogen reveal mass-anomalous fractionations expected of the Archean sulfur cycle, whereas Delta S-34(CDT) values show large fractionations at very small spatial scales, including values below -15 parts per thousand. We interpret these isotopic patterns as recording the process of sulfurization of organic matter by H2S in heterogeneous mat pore-waters influenced by respiratory S metabolism. Positive Delta S-33 anomalies suggest that disproportionation of elemental sulfur would have been a prominent microbial process in these communities.

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