- Gunflint Chert
The Gunflint chert (1.88 Ga [cite journal
title = The age of the Gunflint Formation, Ontario, Canada: single zircon U–Pb age determinations
author = Fralick, P., David, D. W. and Kissin, Stephen A.
journal = Canadian Journal of Earth Sciences
volume = 39
pages = 1085–1091
year = 2002
doi = 10.1139/E02-028 ] ) is a sequence ofbanded iron formation rocks that are exposed in theGunflint Range of northernMinnesota and westernOntario along the north shore ofLake Superior . The black layers in the sequence containmicrofossil s that are 1.9 to 2.3 billion years in age.Stromatolite colonies ofcyanobacteria that have been converted tojasper are found in Ontario. The bandedironstone formation consists of alternating strata ofiron oxide -rich layers interbedded withsilica -rich zones. The iron oxides are typicallyhematite ormagnetite withilmenite , while the silicates are predominantlycryptocrystalline quartz aschert orjasper , along with some minor silicate minerals.Stanley A. Tyler examined the area in 1953, and noted the red-colored stromatolites. He also sampled a jet-black chert layer which, when observedpetrographic ally, revealed some life-like small spheres, rods and filaments less than 10 micrometres in size.Elso Barghoorn , a paleobotanist atHarvard , subsequently looked at these same samples. Barghoorn concluded that "they were indeed structurally preservedunicellular organisms." [Past lives: Chronicles of Canadian Paleontology http://gsc.nrcan.gc.ca/paleochron/05_e.php ] In 1965 the two scientists published their finding, and named a variety of the Gunflint flora. [Barghoorn, E.S. and Tyler, S.A., 1965: "Microorganisms from the Gunflint Chert". Science, vol. 147, p. 563-577.] This created an academic "stampede" to explorePrecambrian microfossil s from similarProterozoic environments.ee also
*
Oxygen catastrophe References
*Schopf, J.W., 1999: "Cradle of Life: The Discovery of Earth's Earliest Fossils". Princeton University Press, 336 p. ISBN 0-691-00230-4
* [http://geowords.com/histbooknetscape/k26.htm Superior type Banded Iron Formation]
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