Abstract
Fossil evidence of eukaryotic life older than 1.8 Ga has long been debated because known fossils of that age usually lack cellular micro-and ultra-structures that bear strong affinities to eukaryotes. These include fossils of the ∼1.9 Ga Gunflint Chert microbiota that, despite being exceptionally well preserved, have suffered from cellular degradation, which poses challenges to studying their delicate cellular structures. In this study, we use an extended-focal-depth imaging technique, in combination with scanning electron microscopy, to document multiple types of large (10-35 μm diameter), cyst-like bodies based on distinctive details such as (1) radially arranged internal strands similar to those in some acritarchs and dinoflagellates; (2) regularly spaced long tubular processes, stubby pustules, and/or robust podia on the cell surface; (3) reticulate cell-wall sculpturing such as scale-like tubercles, pits, and ridges; and (4) internal bodies that may represent membrane-bound organelles. These micro-and ultra-structures provide strong morphological evidence for the presence of protists in the late Paleoproterozoic.
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González-Flores, A. L., Jin, J., Osinski, G. R., & Tsujita, C. J. (2022). Acritarch-like Microorganisms from the 1.9 Ga Gunflint Chert, Canada. Astrobiology, 22(5), 568–578. https://doi.org/10.1089/ast.2021.0081
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