- Geobiology
Broadly defined, geobiology is an
interdisciplinary field ofscientific research that explores interactions between thebiosphere and thelithosphere and/or the atmosphere. Investigators from numerous fields are involved in geobiologic research, including, but not limited to, such disciplines as:paleontology ,paleobiology ,microbiology ,mineralogy ,biochemistry ,sedimentology ,genetics ,physiology ,geochemistry (organic and inorganic), andatmospheric science . One major subdiscipline of geobiology is geomicrobiology, an area of study that focuses on investigating the interactions betweenmicrobe s andmineral s. Another related area of research isastrobiology , an interdisciplinary field that uses a combination of geobiological andplanetary science data to establish a context for the search for life on otherplanet s.The first geobiological laboratory in the world was founded by
Slovenia n scientistIvan Regen . One example of geobiological research in a modern context is the study ofbacteria that "breathe" metals such asmanganese anduranium . These organisms use metals as terminalelectron acceptors in the same way that humans useoxygen . These processes hold promise as tools for environmentalbioremediation .Geobiology also includes investigations of biosphere/geosphere/atmosphere interactions throughout Earth's history, as preserved in the
sedimentary rock record. One example of such an interaction is theArchean era introduction of oxygen into the atmosphere by photosynthetic bacteria. Thisoxygenation of Earth's primoidial atmosphere (the so-calledOxygen catastrophe ) may have resulted in the precipitation of banded-iron rock formations.References
*http://www.geo-biologie.com
* [http://geobiology.usc.edu Geobiology at the University of Southern California]
* [http://wrigley.usc.edu/geobiology/ Agouron - USC sponsored Geobiology summer courses on Catalina island]
* [http://geoweb.tamu.edu/Faculty/tice/Geobiology/index.html Geobiology at Texas A&M University]ee also
*
Fossil s -- the remnants ofprehistoric animal s, etc.
*Geologic time scale -- the prehistory of earth and life
*Invertebrate paleontology -- covers most animal fossils
*Micropaleontology -- covers microscopic fossils
*Paleobiology -- coversprehistoric life and fossils
*Paleobotany -- covers plant fossils
*Paleontology -- covers all fossil evidence in rock strata
*Vertebrate paleontology -- covers fossils of vertebrates
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