The 'Gunflint chert' (2.51
Ga) is a sequence of
banded iron formation rocks that are exposed in the
Gunflint Range of northern
Minnesota and western
Ontario along the north shore of
Lake Superior. The black layers in the sequence contain
microfossils that are 1.9 to 2.3 billion years in age.
Stromatolite colonies of
cyanobacteria that have been converted to
jasper are found in Ontario. The banded
ironstone formation consists of alternating
strata of
iron oxide-rich layers interbedded with
silica-rich zones. The iron oxides are typically
hematite or
magnetite with
ilmenite, while the silicates are predominantly
cryptocrystalline quartz as
chert or
jasper, along with some minor silicate minerals.
Stanley Tyler examined the area in 1953, and noted the red-colored stromatolites. He also sampled a jet-black chert layer which, when observed
petrographically, revealed some life-like small spheres, rods and filaments less than 10 micrometres in size.
Elso Barghoorn, a paleobotanist at
Harvard, subsequently looked at these same samples. Barghoorn concluded that "they were indeed structurally preserved
unicellular organisms."
[1] In 1965 the two scientists published their finding, and named a variety of the 'Gunflint flora'.
[2] This created an academic "stampede" to explore
Precambrian microfossils from similar
Proterozoic environments.
See also
★
Oxygen catastrophe
References
1. Past lives: Chronicles of Canadian Paleontology http://gsc.nrcan.gc.ca/paleochron/05_e.php
2. Barghoorn, E.S. and Tyler, S.A., 1965: ''Microorganisms from the Gunflint Chert''. Science, vol. 147, p. 563-577.
★ Schopf, J.W., 1999: ''Cradle of Life: The Discovery of Earth's Earliest Fossils''. Princeton University Press, 336 p. ISBN 0-691-00230-4
★
Superior type Banded Iron Formation