Produced by the Population Genetics and Evolution class, Furman University

The Precambrian: Apex Chert Microfossils

The Early Archean Apex Basalt, found in northwestern Western Australia, is the source for some of the world’s oldest fossils. It holds eleven different taxa of microbes in a bedded chert (SAO/NASA a). They are microfossils because they are only 10 to 20 micrometers long. They are mostly filaments formed from chains of single cells and resemble current cyanobacteria and blue-green algae (USRA).
The microfossils’ strong resemblance to the cyanobacteria of today supports the possibility that oxygen producing photosynthetic bacteria could have existed as early as approximately 3.465 billion years ago. Also, the number of different kinds of microfossils gives evidence of the morphological diversity of the bacteria (SOA/NASA a).
The microfossils have also been a source of debate as to whether or not the fossils are abiotic. Using recent technology, scientists have been trying to verify the fossils’ biogenicity. However, the results thus far have not been clear (SAO/NASA b).

Page by Laura Snyder

Three of the eleven kinds of microfossils found in the Apex Chert. Universities Space Research Association
Universities Space Research Association(USRA). Ancient Life: Apex Chert Microfossils. Accessed 01/18/10
SAO/NASA a.Microfossils of the Early Archean Apex Chert: New Evidence of the Antiquity of Life. Accessed 01/18/10
SAO/NASA b.Determining the Biogenicity of Microfossils in the Apex Chert, Western Australia, Using Transmission Electron Microscopy. accessed 01/18/10