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“Our findings illustrate that most life that ever existed is now extinct and therefore often overlooked, while these organisms may have played important roles in the evolution of complex life and may have shaped ecosystems for much of Earth history,” said Benjamin Nettersheim, a geobiologist at the University of Bremen’s Center for Marine Environmental Sciences (MARUM), who co-led the work, in an email to Motherboard.For decades, scientists have worked to uncover the roots of our eukaryotic lineage in Earth’s “middle age,” a period that started about 1.7 billion years ago and lasted for a billion years. The simplicity of organisms at this time, combined with the scarcity of rocks with such ancient origins, has presented a huge challenge in the effort to reconstruct bygone ecosystems that ultimately led to all complex life on Earth. Early eukaryotes produced sterols, a type of steroid compound, that are found in fossils, but these biomarkers seem to taper off in the record around 800 million years ago. Konrad Bloch, a Nobel-Prize-winning biochemist, predicted in the 1990s that the oldest eukaryotes might have produced primordial versions of these sterols, though he was doubtful that they could ever be identified in ancient rocks. Now, Nettersheim and his colleagues have validated Bloch’s suspicions with the discovery of proto-sterols in rocks from Australia’s Barney Creek Formation, which date back more than 1.6 billion years.
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