Lakehead professor studied 1.4 billion-year-old rocks near Dorion to determine abundance of life on Earth

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A Lakehead University Geology professor is part of a team of researchers who collaborated on an article exploring oxygen and life on Earth.

 

A Lakehead University Geology professor is part of a team of researchers who collaborated on an article exploring oxygen and life on Earth that Nature.com will release soon.

The article describes how the researchers used gypsum east of Thunder Bay to determine if there was as much life on Earth approximately one billion, four hundred million years ago as there is now.

“The group of scientists I worked with devised a way to determine how abundant life was in the past compared to today,” Dr. Phil Fralick said.

“Oxygen is a key element in the life processes of both plants and animals. It is given off when plants photosynthesize and animals breathe it in to burn calories in their bodies.”

 

Continue reading at Lakehead University.

Image via Lakehead University.