A team of international scientists from China, France, Scotland, United States and
led by Canadian Professors Nigel Blamey and Uwe Brand of Brock University in
southern Ontario made a scientific breakthrough by measuring the oxygen content
of Earth's ancient atmosphere. They discovered that gases trapped by halite (rock
salt) during crystallization may contain atmospheric gases, among them oxygen.
Oxygen is a key component in determining the origin and evolution of higher
life forms that ultimately made Earth's land and sea their home. The gases in
inclusion of halite represent direct measurements of the ancient atmosphere,
and can be used to calculate the dissolved oxygen content of past seawater
and lay out the requirements for the evolution of higher life forms in the shallow
and deep ocean.
This discovery has applications beyond the origin of life, to evaluating salt units
as depositories for hazardous waste material, to tracking atmospheric
changes in carbon dioxide and methane with climate change, to pinpointing
the genesis of economic metal deposits, and application of this important
scientific discovery to the search for life on extraterrestrial bodies. The above
post is reprinted from materials provided by Geological Society of America.
At http://www.geologyin.com/2016/07/earths-early-atmosphere-rock-saltholds.html
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