Close Menu
  • US
  • World
    • Canada
    • Europe
    • Asia
    • Africa
    • Australia
    • South America
  • Politics
  • Business
    • Finance
    • Investing
    • Markets
    • Economy
    • Small Business
    • Crypto
  • Money
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Videos
  • Topics
    • Entertainment
    • Health
    • Tech
    • Travel
  • More Articles
Trending Now
How Trump divided US companies – and handed Europeans an opening

How Trump divided US companies – and handed Europeans an opening

May 20, 2026
Qatar’s tourism sector ready to welcome visitors again

Qatar’s tourism sector ready to welcome visitors again

May 20, 2026
Quebec jail guards protest expired contract, growing use of drones to move contraband

Quebec jail guards protest expired contract, growing use of drones to move contraband

May 20, 2026
How many does Brisbane really need?

How many does Brisbane really need?

May 20, 2026
Which ‘Shifting Gears’ Stars Are — And Aren’t — Returning for Season 3 After Cast Exit Concerns?

Which ‘Shifting Gears’ Stars Are — And Aren’t — Returning for Season 3 After Cast Exit Concerns?

May 20, 2026
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Just In
  • How Trump divided US companies – and handed Europeans an opening
  • Qatar’s tourism sector ready to welcome visitors again
  • Quebec jail guards protest expired contract, growing use of drones to move contraband
  • How many does Brisbane really need?
  • Which ‘Shifting Gears’ Stars Are — And Aren’t — Returning for Season 3 After Cast Exit Concerns?
  • Left-wing Dem Senate hopeful cheered on Antifa violence in unearthed rant: ‘Kill a motherf—er’
  • Mets reverse course on issuing team legend’s famed number to prospect after fan outrage: ‘Just seems wrong’
  • Longtime ‘Teacher of the Year,’ 61, groomed 15-year-old boy for sex, cops say
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact
Pure Info NewsPure Info News
Newsletter
  • US
  • World
    • Canada
    • Europe
    • Asia
    • Africa
    • Australia
    • South America
  • Politics
  • Business
    • Finance
    • Investing
    • Markets
    • Economy
    • Small Business
    • Crypto
  • Money
  • Lifestyle
  • Sports
  • Videos
  • Topics
    • Entertainment
    • Health
    • Tech
    • Travel
  • More Articles
 Markets Login
Pure Info NewsPure Info News
Home » Scientist finds new evidence in Australian rocks
Australia

Scientist finds new evidence in Australian rocks

News RoomNews RoomMay 20, 2026No Comments
Facebook Twitter WhatsApp Telegram Pinterest Email
Scientist finds new evidence in Australian rocks

You have reached your maximum number of saved items.

Remove items from your saved list to add more.

A Sydney scientist has unearthed critical evidence about the oldest-known complex life forms in the universe, parsed from slabs of Australian mudstone which preserved the bodies of organisms that dwelled in a primordial sea.

The microscopic 1.7-billion-year-old creatures are among our oldest ancestors; pioneers which gave rise to all multicellular life from toadstools to velociraptors, humans, bugs, trees and toucans.

Dr Maxwell Lechte has investigated complex life’s earliest stages, locked in Australian rock.Simon Schluter

Geobiologist Dr Max Lechte has tried to pinpoint where and why cells became complex, leading to life as we know it. It’s an ancient mystery that could help alien-hunting astrobiologists decide which planets to train their telescopes on.

Life on Earth was dominated for almost four billion years by mats of primitive bacteria.

“Why didn’t life just stay simple?” Lechte said. “Why did we eventually evolve into more complex forms and eventually into animals and intelligent life, including us?”

Lechte, from the University of Sydney, investigated ancient rocks from the McArthur and Birrindudu basins of the Northern Territory to answer those questions in a new Nature paper.

‘Why didn’t life just stay simple? Why did we eventually evolve into more complex forms and eventually into animals and intelligent life, including us?’

Geobiologist Dr Max Lechte

The landscape of rocky canyons and red soil was once an inland sea. Microscopic organisms lived in the waters, died, and were entombed within the muds of the seafloor, which hardened into rock.

By dissolving chunks of this rock in an acid that preserves organic material, Lechte’s co-author Leigh Anne Riedman from the University of California uncovered 12,000 fossil microbes.

Some were primitive spheres, but others were more elaborate, with jutting appendages and plates, or had creased surfaces like the whorl of fingerprints. These were the ancient “eukaryotes”, the earliest versions of a new and more complex type of life that would lead to all plants, animals and fungi.

“These are our oldest microbial ancestors that we can look at,” Lechte said.

Lechte analysed the rocks’ chemistry. He was looking for iron, which reacts readily with oxygen – think of an exposed nail rusting with air – and reveals details about ancient oxygen levels.

Microscope images of the 1.7 billion-year-old eukaryotes in Northern Territory rock.Dr Maxwell Lechte

The team discovered eukaryotes only thrived in shallow, oxygenated coastal waters. In deeper waters, where oxygen hadn’t reached, they found only simple single-celled bacteria.

Back then, well before the rise of plants, cyanobacteria were the only lifeforms pumping out oxygen. Oxygen levels hovered at 1 per cent of current levels, and the gas dissolved only into the shallowest surfaces of the sea.

Lechte’s results show our early ancestors were restricted to those limited oxygenated pockets for about a billion years until higher levels of the gas liberated them into new habitats, resulting in the appearance of algae, fungi, sea sponges and jellyfish.

Oxygen supercharges the breakdown of organic carbon into energy, like a pair of bellows blasting coals into a roaring fire. But it can also be toxic, damaging cells through oxidation.

Dr Maxwell Lechte sampling fossils near Darwin.Dr Maxwell Lechte

Harnessing oxygen was an evolutionary tradeoff between capitalising on a powerful new fuel and learning to repair from oxidative damage: a job for a complex organism.

Lechte argues the ancient creatures dwelling in oxygen-rich habitats must have gained mitochondria, the “powerhouse” structure which turns oxygen into energy in all eukaryotic cells, including ours.

“That’s important because that sets kind of a minimum date on when the mitochondria were acquired,” Lechte says. “We know that it must have been before 1.7 billion years ago.”

The finding supports the idea that the rise of mitochondria was the crucial turning point from a planet populated by slimy microbial mats to the extraordinary biodiversity we see today.

Interactions between bacteria and microbes within the stromatolites of Shark Bay, WA, may have given rise to mitochondria.Getty Images

Recent research into the origin of mitochondria focused on the possible role of Asgard archaea – a microbe named for the gods’ heavenly fortress in Norse mythology – living alongside the ancient stromatolites of Western Australia.

The stromatolites are the most ancient form of bacterial life, 3.5-billion-year-old rocky structures built by cyanobacteria. Scientists revealed last month that an Asgard microbe from the Shark Bay stromatolites interacted with a bacterium through tube-like structures known as nanotubes.

A long-held biological theory holds that this kind of interaction may have led to the formation of mitochondria, if one microbe engulfed the other. The partnership between Asgard archaea and bacteria may mark a missing link between single-celled life and the type of mitochondria-hosting organisms found in the Northern Territory rocks.

The Asgard archaeon (inset) found within the microbial mats of the stromatolites in Shark Bay, Western Australia. The combination of an archaea and bacteria may have helped give rise to mitochondria and complex life.Iain Duggin, Debnath Ghosal, Brendan Burns

Brendan Burns, an associate professor at the University of NSW and part of the stromatolite research team, said the new Nature paper was intriguing, but noted fossils offer limited information about an organism’s metabolic lifestyle.

“It can be difficult to say from this study whether early eukaryotes required oxygen, or just tolerated oxygen,” he said. The organisms may have just learned to withstand toxic oxygen rather than harness it.

Related Article

The hairy ghost pipefish named after Mr Snaffleupagus.

Lechte said knowing how life formed in deep time, when the Earth was an extreme and alien place, aids the search for extraterrestrial life.

“It’s really important to first understand how life got here, on our planet, before we can speculate about what conditions are good for life on other planets.”

The Examine newsletter explains and analyses science with a rigorous focus on the evidence. Sign up to get it each week.

You have reached your maximum number of saved items.

Remove items from your saved list to add more.

Angus DaltonAngus Dalton is the science reporter for The Sydney Morning Herald.Connect via X or email.

From our partners

Read the full article here

Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram WhatsApp Email

Related News

How many does Brisbane really need?

How many does Brisbane really need?

Indoor sports facility proposed for site beneath Story Bridge in Kangaroo Point

Indoor sports facility proposed for site beneath Story Bridge in Kangaroo Point

Moreton Bay poaches quantum supercomputer from Brisbane Airport

Moreton Bay poaches quantum supercomputer from Brisbane Airport

A tough way to make your point

A tough way to make your point

Commuter chaos after truck hit by Transperth train in Guildford

Commuter chaos after truck hit by Transperth train in Guildford

Inside the mission to monitor Iranian missiles and drones in the Middle East

Inside the mission to monitor Iranian missiles and drones in the Middle East

City of Whittlesea to vote on the future of local sub-branch

City of Whittlesea to vote on the future of local sub-branch

Former council boss asked execs to identify potential job for niece, ICAC told

Former council boss asked execs to identify potential job for niece, ICAC told

‘Amalgamations are back on the table’, minister vows as ‘dysfunctional’ City of Perth council put on notice

‘Amalgamations are back on the table’, minister vows as ‘dysfunctional’ City of Perth council put on notice

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Qatar’s tourism sector ready to welcome visitors again

Qatar’s tourism sector ready to welcome visitors again

May 20, 2026
Quebec jail guards protest expired contract, growing use of drones to move contraband

Quebec jail guards protest expired contract, growing use of drones to move contraband

May 20, 2026
How many does Brisbane really need?

How many does Brisbane really need?

May 20, 2026
Which ‘Shifting Gears’ Stars Are — And Aren’t — Returning for Season 3 After Cast Exit Concerns?

Which ‘Shifting Gears’ Stars Are — And Aren’t — Returning for Season 3 After Cast Exit Concerns?

May 20, 2026
Left-wing Dem Senate hopeful cheered on Antifa violence in unearthed rant: ‘Kill a motherf—er’

Left-wing Dem Senate hopeful cheered on Antifa violence in unearthed rant: ‘Kill a motherf—er’

May 20, 2026

Latest News

Mets reverse course on issuing team legend’s famed number to prospect after fan outrage: ‘Just seems wrong’

Mets reverse course on issuing team legend’s famed number to prospect after fan outrage: ‘Just seems wrong’

May 20, 2026
Longtime ‘Teacher of the Year,’ 61, groomed 15-year-old boy for sex, cops say

Longtime ‘Teacher of the Year,’ 61, groomed 15-year-old boy for sex, cops say

May 20, 2026
Red Lobster’s oldest continuously running location is closing after 56 years

Red Lobster’s oldest continuously running location is closing after 56 years

May 20, 2026

Subscribe to News

Get the latest US news and updates directly to your inbox.

Advertisement
Demo
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest TikTok Instagram
2026 © Prices.com LLC. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Press Release
  • For Advertisers
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

Sign In or Register

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below.

Lost password?