Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-dnltx Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-24T10:07:05.628Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Paleometry as a key tool to deal with paleobiological and astrobiological issues: some contributions and reflections on the Brazilian fossil record

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 March 2019

Amanda L. S. Gomes
Affiliation:
Programa de Pós-graduação em Biotecnologia e Monitoramento Ambiental, Universidade Federalde São Carlos campus Sorocaba, Rod. João Leme dos Santos km 110, CEP 18052-780, Sorocaba, Brazil
Bruno Becker-Kerber
Affiliation:
Programa de Pós-graduação em Ecologia e Recursos Naturais, Universidade Federal de São Carlos, Washington Luiz 325 km, CEP 13565-905, São Carlos, Brazil
Gabriel L. Osés
Affiliation:
Programa de Pós-graduação em Ecologia e Recursos Naturais, Universidade Federal de São Carlos, Washington Luiz 325 km, CEP 13565-905, São Carlos, Brazil
Gustavo Prado
Affiliation:
Instituto de Geociências, Universidade de São Paulo, Rua do Lago 562, CEP 05508-080, São Paulo, Brazil
Pedro Becker Kerber
Affiliation:
Instituto de Química, Universidade Federal de Mato Grosso do Sul, Cidade Universitária, Av. Costa e Silva – Pioneiros, CEP 79070-900, Campo Grande, Brazil
Gabriel E. B. de Barros
Affiliation:
Departamento de Biologia, Universidade Federal de São Carlos – campus Sorocaba, Rod. João Leme dos Santos km 110, CEP 18052-780, Sorocaba, Brazil
Douglas Galante
Affiliation:
Brazilian Synchrotron Light Laboratory, Brazilian Center for Research in Energy and Materials, Av. Giuseppe Maximo Scolfaro, 10000, CEP 13083-100, Campinas, Brazil
Elidiane Rangel
Affiliation:
Universidade Estadual Paulista Júlio de Mesquita Filho, Unidade Diferenciada Sorocaba, Av. 3 de março, 511, Alto da Boa Vista, 18087180, Sorocaba, Brazil
Pidassa Bidola
Affiliation:
Department of Physics and Institute for Medical Engineering, Technische Universität München, Garching, Germany
Julia Herzen
Affiliation:
Department of Physics and Institute for Medical Engineering, Technische Universität München, Garching, Germany
Franz Pfeiffer
Affiliation:
Department of Physics and Institute for Medical Engineering, Technische Universität München, Garching, Germany
Márcia A. Rizzutto
Affiliation:
Instituto de Física, Universidade de São Paulo, Rua do Matão, Travessa R 187, CEP 05508-090, São Paulo, Brazil
Mírian L. A. F. Pacheco*
Affiliation:
Departamento de Biologia, Universidade Federal de São Carlos – campus Sorocaba, Rod. João Leme dos Santos km 110, CEP 18052-780, Sorocaba, Brazil
*
Author for correspondence: Mírian L. A. F. Pacheco, E-mail: forancelli.ufscar@gmail.com

Abstract

Investigations into the existence of life in other parts of the cosmos find strong parallels with studies of the origin and evolution of life on our own planet. In this way, astrobiology and paleobiology are married by their common interest in disentangling the interconnections between life and the surrounding environment. In this way, a cross-point of both sciences is paleometry, which involves a myriad of imaging and geochemical techniques, usually non-destructive, applied to the investigation of the fossil record. In the last decades, paleometry has benefited from an unprecedented technological improvement, thus solving old questions and raising new ones. This advance has been paralleled by conceptual approaches and discoveries fuelled by technological evolution in astrobiological research. In this context, we present some new data and review recent advances on the employment of paleometry to investigations on paleobiology and astrobiology in Brazil in areas such biosignatures in Ediacaran microbial mats, biogenicity tests on enigmatic Ediacaran structures, research on Ediacaran metazoan biomineralization, fossil preservation in Cretaceous insects and fish, and finally the experimental study on the decay of fish to test the effect of distinct types of sediment on soft-tissue preservation, as well as the effects of early diagenesis on fish bone preservation.

Type
Review Article
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2019 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Adrian, L, Manz, W, Szewzyk, U and Görisch, H (1998) Physiological characterization of a bacterial consortium reductively dechlorinating 1, 2, 3-and 1, 2, 4-trichlorobenzene. Applied and Environmental Microbiology 64, 496503.Google Scholar
Babcock, LE, Grunow, AM, Sadowski, GR and Leslie, SA (2005) Corumbella, an Ediacaran-grade organism from the Late Neoproterozoic of Brazil. Palaeogeography, Palaeoclimatology, Palaeoecology 220, 718.Google Scholar
Basei, MAS, Drukas, CO, Nutman, AP, Wemmer, K, Dunyi, L, Santos, PRD, Passarelli, CR, CamposNeto, MC Neto, MC, Siga, OJ, and Osako, L (2011) The Itajaí foreland basin: a tectono-sedimentary record of the Ediacaran period, Southern Brazil. International Journal of Earth Sciences 100, 543569.Google Scholar
Beasley, MM, Bartelink, EJ, Taylor, L and Miller, RM (2014) Comparison of transmission FTIR, ATR, and DRIFT spectra: implications for assessment of bone bioapatite diagenesis. Journal of Archaeological Science 46, 1622.Google Scholar
Becker-Kerber, B, Osés, GL, Curado, JF, Rizzutto, MDA, Rudnitzki, ID, Romero, GR, Onary-Alves, SY, Benini, VG, Galante, D, Rodrigues, F, Buck, PV, Rangel, EC, Ghilardi, RP and Pacheco, MLAF (2017 a) Geobiological and diagenetic insights from Malvinokaffric devonian biota (Chapada Group, Paraná Basin, Brazil): paleobiological and paleoenvironmental implications. Palaios 32, 238249.Google Scholar
Becker-Kerber, B, Pacheco, MLAF, Rudnitzki, ID, Galante, D, Rodrigues, F and de Moraes Leme, J (2017 b) Ecological interactions in Cloudina from the Ediacaran of Brazil: implications for the rise of animal biomineralization. Scientific Reports 7, 5482.Google Scholar
Bedard, DL, Bailey, JJ, Reiss, BL and Jerzak, GVS (2006) Development and characterization of stable sediment-free anaerobic bacterial enrichment cultures that dechlorinate Aroclor 1260. Applied and Environmental Microbiology 72, 24602470.Google Scholar
Benner, SA (2010) Defining life. Astrobiology 10, 10211030.Google Scholar
Bidola, P, Stockmar, M, Achterhold, K, Pfeiffer, F, Pacheco, MLAF, Soriano, C, Beckmann, F and Herzen, J (2015 a) Absorption and phase contrast X-Ray imaging in paleontology using laboratory and synchrotron sources. Microscopy and Microanalysis 21, 12881295.Google Scholar
Bidola, PM, Zanette, I, Achterhold, K, Holzner, C and Pfeiffer, F (2015 b) Optimization of propagation-based phase-contrast imaging at a laboratory setup. Optics Express 23, 3000030013.Google Scholar
Bissaro-Júnior, MC, Ghilardi, RP, Bueno, MR, Manzoli, A, Adorni, FS, Muniz, FP, Guilherme, E, Filho, JPS, Negri, FR and Hsiou, AS (2018) The total station as a tool for recording provenance in paleontology fieldwork: configuration, use, advantages, and disadvantages. Palaios 33, 5560.Google Scholar
Bower, DM, Hummer, DR, Steele, A and Kyono, A (2015) The Co-evolution of Fe-oxides, Ti-oxides, and other microbially induced mineral precipitates in sandy sediments: understanding the role of cyanobacteria In weathering and early diagenesis. Journal of Sedimentary Research 85, 12131227.Google Scholar
Brasier, MD and Wacey, D (2012) Fossils and astrobiology: new protocols for cell evolution in deep time. International Journal of Astrobiology 11, 217228.Google Scholar
Brasier, MD, Green, OR, Jephcoat, AP, Kleppe, AK, Van Kranendonk, MJ, Lindsay, JF, Steele, A and Grassineau, NV (2002) Questioning the evidence for Earth's oldest fossils. Nature 416, 76.Google Scholar
Brasier, MD, Antcliffe, J, Saunders, M and Wacey, D (2015) Changing the picture of Earth's earliest fossils (3.5–1.9 Ga) with new approaches and new discoveries. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 112, 48594864.Google Scholar
Briggs, DE and McMahon, S (2016) The role of experiments in investigating the taphonomy of exceptional preservation. Palaeontology 59, 111.Google Scholar
Buick, R (1990) Microfossil recognition in Archean rocks: an appraisal of spheroids and filaments from a 3500 my old chert-barite unit at North Pole, Western Australia. Palaios 5, 441459.Google Scholar
Cai, Y, Xiao, S, Hua, H and Yuan, X (2015) New material of the biomineralizing tubular fossil Sinotubulites from the late Ediacaran Dengying Formation, South China. Precambrian Research 261, 1224.Google Scholar
Canfield, DE and Raiswell, R (1991) Pyrite formation and fossil preservation. In Allison PA and Briggs DEG (eds), Taphonomy: Releasing the Data Locked in the Fossil Record, Topics in Geobiology, vol. 9, Plenum Press, pp. 337387.Google Scholar
Cappellen, P (2003) Biomineralization and global biogeochemical cycles. Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry 54, 357381.Google Scholar
Chen, Z, Bengtson, S, Zhou, CM, Hua, H and Yue, Z (2008) Tube structure and original composition of Sinotubulites: shelly fossils from the late Neoproterozoic in southern Shaanxi, China. Lethaia 41, 3745.Google Scholar
Chen, JY, Bottjer, DJ, Davidson, EH, Li, G, Gao, F, Cameron, RA, Hadfield, MG, Xian, D, Tafforeau, P, Jia, Q, Sugiyama, H and Tang, R (2009) Phase contrast synchrotron X-ray microtomography of Ediacaran (Doushantuo) metazoan microfossils: Phylogenetic diversity and evolutionary implications. Precambrian Research 173, 191200.Google Scholar
Cloud, P (1973) Paleoecological significance of the banded iron-formation. Economic Geology 68, 11351143.Google Scholar
Conrad, PG and Nealson, KH (2001) A non-Earthcentric approach to life detection. Astrobiology 1, 1524.Google Scholar
Glaessner, MF (1980) Pseudofossils from the Precambrian, including ‘Buschmannia'and ‘Praesolenopora’. Geological Magazine 117, 199200.Google Scholar
Delgado, ADO, Buck, PV, Osés, GL, Ghilardi, RP, Rangel, EC and Pacheco, MLAF (2014) Paleometry: a brand new area in Brazilian science. Materials Research 17, 14341441.Google Scholar
Dodd, MS, Papineau, D, Grenne, T, Slack, JF, Rittner, M, Pirajno, F, O'Neil, J and Little, CT (2017) Evidence for early life in Earth's oldest hydrothermal vent precipitates. Nature 543, 60.Google Scholar
Dupraz, C, Reid, RP, Braissant, O, Decho, AW, Norman, RS and Visscher, PT (2009) Processes of carbonate precipitation in modern microbial mats. Earth-Science Reviews 96, 141162.Google Scholar
Fairchild, TR, Sanchez, EA, Pacheco, MLA and de Moraes Leme, J (2012) Evolution of Precambrian life in the Brazilian geological record. International Journal of Astrobiology 11, 309323.Google Scholar
Freire, PTC, Abagaro, BTO, Sousa Filho, FE, Silva, JH, Saraiva, AAF, Brito, DDS and Viana, BC (2013) Pyritization of fossils from the Lagerstätte Araripe Basin, Northeast Brazil, from the Cretaceous period. Pyrite: synthesis, characterization and uses. New York: Nova Science Publishers Inc, pp. 123140.Google Scholar
Germs, GJ (1972) New shelly fossils from Nama Group, south west Africa. American Journal of Science 272, 752761.Google Scholar
Glamoclija, M, Steele, A, Fries, M, Schieber, J, Voytek, MA and Cockell, CS (2009) Association of anatase and microbes: unusual fossilization effect or a potential biosignature? Geological Society of America Special Papers 458, 965975.Google Scholar
Golden, DC, Ming, DW, Morris, RV, Brearley, AJ, Jr.Lauer, HV, Treiman, AH, Zolensky, ME, Schwandt, CS, Lofgren, GE and Mckay, GA (2015) Evidence for exclusively inorganic formation of magnetite in Martian meteorite ALH84001. American Mineralogist 89, 681695.Google Scholar
Grant, SW (1990) Shell structure and distribution of Cloudina, a potential index fossil for the terminal Proterozoic. American Journal of Science 290, 261294.Google Scholar
Grotzinger, JP (2014) Habitability, taphonomy, and the search for organic carbon on Mars. Science 343, 386387.Google Scholar
Grotzinger, JP, Watters, WA and Knoll, AH (2000) Calcified metazoans in thrombolite-stromatolite reefs of the terminal Proterozoic Nama Group, Namibia. Paleobiology 26, 334359.Google Scholar
Guadagnin, F, Chemale, F, Dussin, IA, Jelinek, AR, dos Santos, MN, Borba, ML, Justino, D, Bertottia, AL, and Alessandretti, L (2010) Depositional age and provenance of the Itajaí Basin, Santa Catarina State, Brazil: implications for SW Gondwana correlation. Precambrian Research 180, 180182.Google Scholar
Hofmann, HJ and Mountjoy, EW (2001) Namacalathus-Cloudina assemblage in Neoproterozoic Miette Group (Byng Formation), British Columbia: Canada's oldest shelly fossils. Geology 29, 10911094.Google Scholar
Hua, H, Chen, Z, Yuan, X, Zhang, L and Xiao, S (2005) Skeletogenesis and asexual reproduction in the earliest biomineralizing animal Cloudina. Geology 33, 277280.Google Scholar
Hua, H, Pratt, BR, and Zhang, LY (2003) Borings in Cloudina shells: complex predator-prey dynamics in the terminal Neoproterozoic. Palaios 18, 454459.Google Scholar
Javaux, EJ and Dehant, V (2010) Habitability: from stars to cells. The Astronomy and Astrophysics Review 18, 383416.Google Scholar
Judson, OP (2017) The energy expansions of evolution. Nature Ecology & Evolution, 1(6), 0138.Google Scholar
Kim, J, Dong, H, Seabaugh, J, Newell, SW and Eberl, DD (2004) Role of microbes in the smectite-to-illite reaction. Science 303, 830832.Google Scholar
Knoll, AH (2003) Biomineralization and evolutionary history. Reviews in Mineralogy and Geochemistry 54, 329356.Google Scholar
Knoll, AH (2013) Systems paleobiology. GSA Bulletin 125, 313.Google Scholar
Levin, GV and Straat, PA (1976) Viking labeled release biology experiment: interim results. Science 194, 13221329.Google Scholar
Lima, RJC, Saraiva, AAF, Lanfredi, S, Nobre, MADL, Freire, PDTC and Sasaki, JM (2007) Spectroscopic characterization of a fish of the cretaceous period (Araripe Basin). Química Nova 30, 2224.Google Scholar
Lowenstam, HA and Weiner, S (1989) On Biomineralization. New York, Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
MacLean, LCW, Tyliszczak, T, Gilbert, PUPA, Zhou, D, Pray, TJ, Onstott, TC and Southam, G (2008) A high-resolution chemical and structural study of framboidal pyrite formed within a low-temperature bacterial biofilm. Geobiology 6, 471480.Google Scholar
Maldanis, L, Carvalho, M, Almeida, MR, Freitas, FI, de Andrade, JAFG, Nunes, RS, Rochitte, CE, Poppi, RJ, Freitas, RO, Rodrigues, F, Siljeström, S, Lima, FA, Galante, D, Carvalho, IS, Perez, CA, de Carvalho, MR, Bettini, J, Fernandez, V and Xavier-Neto, J (2016) Heart fossilization is possible and informs the evolution of cardiac outflow tract in vertebrates. Elife 5, e14698.Google Scholar
Mandair, GS and Morris, MD (2015) Contributions of Raman spectroscopy to the understanding of bone strength. BoneKEy Reports 4, 18.Google Scholar
Martill, DM, Bechly, G and Loveridge, RF (2007) The Crato Fossil Beds of Brazil: Window Into an Ancient World. Cambridge: New York, Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
McIlroy, D, Crimes, TP and Pauley, JC (2005) Fossils and matgrounds from the Neoproterozoic Longmyndian Supergroup, Shropshire, UK. Geological Magazine 142, 441455.Google Scholar
McKay, DS, Gibson, EK, Thomas-Keprta, KL, Vali, H, Romanek, CS, Clemett, SJ, Chillier, XDF, Maechling, CR and Zare, RN (1996) Search for past life on Mars: possible relic biogenic activity in Martian meteorite ALH84001. Science 273, 924930.Google Scholar
Menon, LR, McIlroy, D, Liu, AG and Brasier, MD (2016) The dynamic influence of microbial mats on sediments: fluid escape and pseudofossil formation in the Ediacaran Longmyndian Supergroup, UK. Journal of the Geological Society 173, 177185.Google Scholar
Morris, MD and Mandair, GS (2011) Raman assessment of bone quality. Clinical Orthopaedics and Related Research® 469, 21602169.Google Scholar
Naimark, E, Kalinina, M, Shokurov, A, Boeva, N, Markov, A and Zaytseva, L (2016) Decaying in different clays: implications for soft-tissue preservation. Palaeontology 59, 583595.Google Scholar
Neumann, VHML (1999) Estratigrafia, Sedimentologia, Geoquimica y Diagenesis de los Sistemas Lacustres Aptiense-Albienses de la Cuenca de Araripe (Noreste De Brasil) (Tesis de Doctorado). Universitat de Barcelona, Barcelona, 1999.Google Scholar
Nielsen-Marsh, CM and Hedges, RE (2000) Patterns of diagenesis in bone I: the effects of site environments. Journal of Archaeological Science 27, 11391150.Google Scholar
Noffke, N (2010) Geobiology: Microbial Mats in Sandy Deposits From the Archean Era to Today. Springer-Verlag, Berlin. Springer Science & Business Media.Google Scholar
Noffke, N (2015) Ancient sedimentary structures in the <3.7 Ga gillespie lake member, mars, that resemble macroscopic morphology, spatial associations, and temporal succession in terrestrial microbialites. Astrobiology 15, 169192.Google Scholar
Orosei, R, Lauro, SE, Pettinelli, E, Cicchetti, A, Coradini, M, Cosciotti, B, Di Paolo, F, Flamini, E, Mattei, E, Pajola, M, Soldovieri, F, Cartacci, M, Cassenti, F, Frigeri, A, Giuppi, S, Martufi, R, Masdea, A, Mitri, G, Nenna, C, Noschese, R, Restano, M and Seu, R (2018) Radar evidence of subglacial liquid water on Mars. Science 361, eaar7268.Google Scholar
Osés, GL, Petri, S, Becker-Kerber, B, Romero, GR, de Almeida Rizzutto, M, Rodrigues, F, Galante, D, Silva, TF, Curado, JF, Rangel, EC, Ribeiro, RP and Pacheco, MLAF (2016) Deciphering the preservation of fossil insects: a case study from the Crato Member, Early Cretaceous of Brazil. PeerJ 4, e2756.Google Scholar
Osés, GL, Petri, S, Voltani, CG, Prado, GM, Galante, D, Rizzutto, MA, Rudnitzki, ID, Silva, EP, Rodrigues, F, Rangel, EC, Sucerquia, PA and Pacheco, MLAF (2017) Deciphering pyritization-kerogenization gradient for fish soft-tissue preservation. Scientific Reports 7, 1468.Google Scholar
Pacheco, MLF, Galante, D, Rodrigues, F, Leme, JDM, Bidola, P, Hagadorn, W, Stockmar, M, Herzen, J, Rudnitzki, ID, Pfeiffer, F and Marques, AC (2015) Insights into the skeletonization, lifestyle, and affinity of the unusual Ediacaran fossil Corumbella. PLoS ONE 10, e0114219.Google Scholar
Pacheco, MLF, Becker-Kerber, B and Barroso, FRG (2016) Quando os animais herdaram o planeta. In Galante, D, Silva, EP, Rodrigues, F, Horvath, J and Avellar, MG (eds), Astrobiologia, uma ciência emergente. São Paulo: Tikinet Edição, IAG/USP. pp. 197216.Google Scholar
Paim, PSG and Fonseca, MMD (2004) Bacias do Camaquã e Itajaí. In: Mantesso-Neto, V, Bartorelli, A, Carneiro, CDR, Brito-Neves, BB (eds), Geologia do Continente Sul-Americano: Evolução da Obra de Fernando Flávio Marques de Almeida. São Paulo: Editora Beca, pp. 490500.Google Scholar
Parry, LA, Boggiani, PC, Condon, DJ, Garwood, RJ, Leme, JDM, McIlroy, D, Brasier, MD, Trindade, R, Campanha, GAC, Pacheco, MLAF, Diniz, CQC and Liu, AG (2017) Ichnological evidence for meiofaunal bilaterians from the terminal Ediacaran and earliest Cambrian of Brazil. Nature Ecology & Evolution 1, 1455.Google Scholar
Penny, AM, Wood, R, Curtis, A, Bowyer, F, Tostevin, R and Hoffman, KH (2014) Ediacaran metazoan reefs from the Nama Group, Namibia. Science 344, 15041506.Google Scholar
Porter, SM (2010) Calcite and aragonite seas and the de novo acquisition of carbonate skeletons. Geobiology 8, 256277.Google Scholar
Pruss, SB, Blättler, CL, Macdonald, FA and Higgins, JA (2018) Calcium isotope evidence that the earliest metazoan biomineralizers formed aragonite shells. Geology 46, 763766.Google Scholar
Purnell, MA, Donoghue, PJ, Gabbott, SE, McNamara, ME, Murdock, DJ and Sansom, RS (2018) Experimental analysis of soft-tissue fossilization: opening the black box. Palaeontology 61, 317323.Google Scholar
Raiswell, R, Bottrell, SH, Al-Biatty, HJ and Tan, MM (1993) The influence of bottom water oxygenation and reactive iron content on sulfur incorporation into bitumens from Jurassic marine shales. American Journal of Science 293, 569596.Google Scholar
Riquelme, F, Ruvalcaba-Sil, JL and Alvarado-Ortega, J (2009) Palaeometry: non-destructive analysis of fossil materials. Boletín de la Sociedad Geológica Mexicana 61, 177183.Google Scholar
Rostirolla, SP (1991) Tectônica e sedimentação da Bacia do Itajaí-SC (Mastership dissertation). Universidade Federal de Ouro Preto, Ouro Preto, 131.Google Scholar
Rostirolla, SP, Ahrendt, A, Soares, PC and Carmignani, L (1999) Basin analysis and mineral endowment of the Proterozoic Itajaí Basin, south-east Brazil. Basin Research 11, 127142.Google Scholar
Saager, RB, Balu, M, Crosignani, V, Sharif, A, Durkin, AJ, Kelly, KM and Tromberg, BJ (2015) In vivo measurements of cutaneous melanin across spatial scales: using multiphoton microscopy and spatial frequency domain spectroscopy. Journal of Biomedical Optics 20, 066005.Google Scholar
Sagemann, J, Bale, SJ, Briggs, DE and Parkes, RJ (1999) Controls on the formation of authigenic minerals in association with decaying organic matter: an experimental approach. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 63, 10831095.Google Scholar
Schieber, J, Bose, PK, Eriksson, PG, Banerjee, S, Sarkar, S, Altermann, W and Catuneanu, O (eds) (2007) Atlas of Microbial mat Features Preserved Within the Siliciclastic Rock Record, vol. 2. Amsterdan: Elsevier.Google Scholar
Schiffbauer, JD, Xiao, S, Cai, Y, Wallace, AF, Hua, H, Hunter, J, Huifang, X, Peng, Y and Kaufman, AJ (2014) A unifying model for Neoproterozoic–Palaeozoic exceptional fossil preservation through pyritization and carbonaceous compression. Nature Communications 5, 5754.Google Scholar
Schopf, JW, Farmer, JD, Foster, IS, Kudryavtsev, AB, Gallardo, VA and Espinoza, C (2012) Gypsum-permineralized microfossils and their relevance to the search for life on Mars. Astrobiology 12, 619633.Google Scholar
Schopf, JW, Kudryavtsev, AB, Agresti, DG, Czaja, AD and Wdowiak, TJ (2005) Raman imagery: a new approach to assess the geochemical maturity and biogenicity of permineralized Precambrian fossils. Astrobiology 5, 333371.Google Scholar
Sperling, EA, Halverson, GP, Knoll, AH, Macdonald, FA and Johnston, DT (2013) A basin redox transect at the dawn of animal life. Earth and Planetary Science Letters 371, 143155.Google Scholar
Toporski, JK, Steele, A, Westall, F, Thomas-Keprta, KL and McKay, DS (2002) The simulated silicification of bacteria—new clues to the modes and timing of bacterial preservation and implications for the search for extraterrestrial microfossils. Astrobiology 2, 126.Google Scholar
Traverse, A (2007) What paleopalynology is and is not. In Traverse A. (ed), Paleopalynology. Dordrecht: Springer, pp. 143.Google Scholar
Trueman, CN (2013) Chemical taphonomy of biomineralized tissues. Palaeontology 56, 475486.Google Scholar
Tütken, T, Vennemann, TW and Pfretzschner, HU (2011) Nd and Sr isotope compositions in modern and fossil bones – proxies for vertebrate provenance and taphonomy. Geochimica et Cosmochimica Acta 75, 59515970.Google Scholar
Vermeij, GJ (1989) The origin of skeletons. Palaios 5, 585589.Google Scholar
Vermeij, GJ (2002) Evolution in the consumer age: predators and the history of life. Paleontological Society Papers 8, 375393.Google Scholar
Wacey, D (2009) Early Life on Earth: A practical Guide. Springer, New York.Google Scholar
Wacey, D (2010) Stromatolites in the ~3400 Ma Strelley Pool Formation, Western Australia: examining biogenicity from the macro-to the nano-scale. Astrobiology 10, 381395.Google Scholar
Wacey, D, Saunders, M, Kong, C and Brasier, M (2015) Solving the controversy of Earth's oldest fossils using electron microscopy. Microscopy and Microanalysis 21, 20912092.Google Scholar
Wacey, D, Saunders, M, Kong, C and Brasier, M (2016) Solving the Controversy of Earth’s Oldest Fossils Using Electron Microscopy. Microscopy Today 24, 1217.Google Scholar
Warren, LV, Simões, MG, Fairchild, TR, Riccomini, C, Gaucher, C, Anelli, LE, Freitas, BT, Boggiani, PC and Quaglio, F (2013) Origin and impact of the oldest metazoan bioclastic sediments. Geology 41, 507510.Google Scholar
Weiner, S (2008) Biomineralization: a structural perspective. Journal of Structural Biology 163, 229234.Google Scholar
Westall, F, Foucher, F, Bost, N, Bertrand, M, Loizeau, D, Vago, JL, Kminek, G, Gaboyer, F, Campbell, KA, Bréhéret, J, Gautret, P and Cockell, CS (2015) Biosignatures on Mars: what, where, and how? Implications for the search for martian life. Astrobiology 15, 9981029.Google Scholar
Wood, R and Penny, A (2018) Substrate growth dynamics and biomineralization of an Ediacaran encrusting poriferan. Proceedings of the Royal Society B 285, 20171938.Google Scholar
Wood, R, Ivantsov, AYu and Zhuravlev, AYu (2017 a) First macrobiota biomineralization was environmentally triggered. Proceedings of the Royal Society B 284, 20170059.Google Scholar
Wood, R, Zhuravlev, AYu, Sukhov, S, Zhu, M and Zhao, F (2017 b) Demise of Ediacaran dolomitic seas marks widespread biomineralization on the Siberian Platform. Geology 45, 2730.Google Scholar
Wood, RA and Zhuravlev, AY (2012) Escalation and ecological selectively of mineralogy in the Cambrian Radiation of skeletons. Earth-Science Reviews 115, 249261.Google Scholar
Wood, RA, Grotzinger, JP and Dickson, JAD (2002) Proterozoic modular biomineralized metazoan from the Nama Group, Namibia. Science 296, 23832386.Google Scholar
Xiao, S and Laflamme, M (2009) On the eve of animal radiation: phylogeny, ecology and evolution of the Ediacara biota. Trends in Ecology & Evolution 24, 3140.Google Scholar
Xiao, S, Yuan, X, Steiner, M and Knoll, AH (2002) Macroscopic carbonaceous compressions in a terminal Proterozoic shale: a systematic reassessment of the Miaohe biota, South China. Journal of Paleontology 76, 347376.Google Scholar
Zhuravlev, AY and Wood, RA (2008) Eve of biomineralization: controls on skeletal mineralogy. Geology 36, 923926.Google Scholar
Zhuravlev, AY, Liñán, E, Vintaned, JAG, Debrenne, F and Fedorovet, AB (2012) New finds of skeletal fossils in the terminal neoproterozoic of the Siberian platform and Spain. Acta Palaeontologica Polonica 57, 205224.Google Scholar
Zhuravlev, AY, Wood, RA and Penny, AM (2015) Ediacaran skeletal metazoan interpreted as a lophophorate. Proceedings of the Royal Society B 282, 20151860.Google Scholar
Supplementary material: PDF

Gomes et al. supplementary material

Gomes et al. supplementary material
Download Gomes et al. supplementary material(PDF)
PDF 128.4 KB