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Wrinkles in ancient rock may be signs of early life

Take a walk along any shore line – the odds are you’ll see at least a few rocks with a wrinkled pattern like the one below; what are these wrinkles? The answer is surprisingly complex, and has had geologists scratching their heads for decades, but now, that riddle may have finally been answered. The problem […]

Mihai Andrei
September 12, 2014 @ 3:38 pm

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Take a walk along any shore line – the odds are you’ll see at least a few rocks with a wrinkled pattern like the one below; what are these wrinkles? The answer is surprisingly complex, and has had geologists scratching their heads for decades, but now, that riddle may have finally been answered.

Image via MIT.

The problem with these patterns is that they don’t appear in modern environments – so whatever was causing them (or at least some important factor) was lost along the way. To make things even more interesting, these patterns seem to be much more abundant in periods following mass extinctions.

Now, MIT researchers believe they have discovered an underlying mechanism which may explain the formation of these wrinkles. Based on this mechanism, they believe that the wrinkles are in fact signs of ancient life – wherever they were found, microbial life abounded. 

“You have about 3 billion years of Earth’s history where everything was microbial. The wrinkle structures were present, but don’t seem to have been all that common,” says Tanja Bosak, the Alfred Henry and Jean Morrison Hayes Career Development Associate Professor in MIT’s Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences. “But it seems they become really abundant at the time when early animals were around. Knowing the mechanism of these features gives us a better sense of the environmental pressures these early animals were experiencing.”

The oldest such patterns were dated to rocks up to 575 million years old — from a time when the earliest animals may have arisen. Some paleontologists seemed to believe that they were the result of ancient sea foam, while others put the money on the ocean waves.

“Some of them look like wave ripples, and others look like raindrop impressions,” Mariotti says. “They’re shapes that remain in the sediment, like the footprint of a dinosaur.”

But the majority seems to be on microbial activity – and this study seems to confirm that. Following an extinction period, microbes take over the seafloor in wide, leathery patches that were tough enough to withstand the overlying flow.

In order to test this theory, the researchers went into the lab by growing microbial mats in custom-built wave tanks, partially filled with sand, setting up time-lapse video to track the evolution of the sea floor model. The results were quite significant.


After a few days, he spotted tiny, millimeter-wide ripples in the sand. Looking back at the time-lapse images, he discovered the mechanism – fragments of the microbes were rolling on the sand and rearranged the sediments to create wave like patterns. More controlled experiments with more and more controlled environments confirmed that it is indeed, microbes that create the patterns –  not whole microbes, but microbial fragments, rolling around in the sand, creating the wrinkled patterns we see today when the sediment solidifies.

But it’s still not clear why they pop up after extinction events, although geologists have a theory:

“What we’re suggesting is that there may be some sort of sweet spot: You can’t have too many animals feeding, because then you lose microbial mats completely, but you need enough to produce these fragments,” Bosak says. “And that sweet spot could occur after a large marine extinction event.”

Image via MIT.

Understanding this process could be very important for understanding life not only on Earth, but on other planets as well, as David Bottjer, a professor of earth sciences at the University of Southern California explains; if we find such wrinkles on another planet (say, Mars), we can say, with satisfying certainty, that there was, at one point, microbial life on Mars.

“It has been suggested that if a Martian rover was scanning sedimentary rocks that had been deposited underwater, and it saw wrinkle structures, that this could mean that there was microbial life present when the rocks were deposited,” says Bottjer, who was not involved in the work. “This study provides experimental evidence that, indeed, microbial fragments derived from microbial mats would be necessary to produce wrinkle structures. So, as a ‘biomarker’ indicating that microbial life would have existed on Mars, this strengthens the case for wrinkle structures, if they are found.”

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