The Beck Spring Dolomite is a geological formation in Death Valley, California from the Tonian period of the Neoproterozoic era. It is believed to be between 750 to 800 million year olds. It is known for its highly palaeontologically significant fossils of microbial life. [1] It consists almost entirely of dolomite. [2]

There are three layers of dolomite found there. The topmost part is laminae of pelletal and mosaic dolomite. The next is oolitic of mosaic dolomite with oolite, pisolite, and grapestone. The lowest layer is upper cherty stromatolites that has been partially silicified and dolomitized. [3]

Palaeontological significance

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Paul Knauth, a geologist at Arizona State University, maintains that photosynthesizing organisms such as algae may have grown in the Beck Spring Dolomite. Samples were taken in the 1990s revealed that the region housed flourishing mats of photosynthesizing, unicellular life forms which antedated the Cambrian explosion.

Microfossils have been found in holes in the surface of the dolomite. These microfossil and geochemical findings support the idea that during the Precambrian period, complex life evolved both in the oceans and on land. Knauth contends that do to the high levels of salt and low levels of oxygen in the ocean at that time, the animals may have had their origin in freshwater lakes and streams.

Since the original discovery, studies have documented plenty of microfossil and geochemical evidence showing that life covered the continents as far back as 2.2 billion years ago. While most paleobiologists now accept the idea that simple life forms existed on land during the Precambrian, few accept that multicellular life thrived on land more than 600 million years ago.[4]

References

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  1. ^ Shuster, Alice Mary; Wallace, Malcolm William; van Smeerdijk Hood, Ashleigh; Jiang, Ganqing (2018-06-01). "The Tonian Beck Spring Dolomite: Marine dolomitization in a shallow, anoxic sea". Sedimentary Geology. 368: 83–104. Bibcode:2018SedG..368...83S. doi:10.1016/j.sedgeo.2018.03.003. ISSN 0037-0738. S2CID 134427812.
  2. ^ Shuster, Alice Mary; Wallace, Malcolm William; van Smeerdijk Hood, Ashleigh; Jiang, Ganqing (2018-06-01). "The Tonian Beck Spring Dolomite: Marine dolomitization in a shallow, anoxic sea". Sedimentary Geology. 368: 83–104. Bibcode:2018SedG..368...83S. doi:10.1016/j.sedgeo.2018.03.003. ISSN 0037-0738. S2CID 134427812.
  3. ^ Allan M. Gutstadt (December 1, 1968). "Petrology and depositional environments of the Beck Spring Dolomite (Precambrian), Kingston Range, California". Journal of Sedimentary Research. Retrieved 2023-12-22.
  4. ^ Byrne, Quanta Magazine, Peter. "Death Valley's First Life Came by Land, Not by Sea". Scientific American.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
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U.S. Geological Survey, National Geologic Map Database