Skip to main content

Earth's Oldest Color Was Pink



What color is the ocean? Well, blue, of course.

But this wasn't always the case. If you assume that prehistoric oceans were blue just like they are today, you'd be wrong. Scientists recently discovered ancient oceans were actually a rosy hue, making pink the world's oldest-known color.

Researchers found the mighty little pink pigment in bacterial fossils from the Sahara Desert in Mauritania, West Africa. The cyanobacteria were thought to have survived on sunlight and, more than 650 million years ago, they became the dominant life form in Earth's oceans for eons. Cyanobacteria probably even predated algae, which has long been thought to be one of the earliest building blocks of the evolutionary life of larger animals, according to findings published July 9 in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.

So what made these little microbes think pink? Well, it wasn't their fashion sense. The fossilized chlorophyll inside the bacteria was dark red and purple in its concentrated form, which means that when diluted by water or soil, it would have lent a pink cast to earth and sea. This is unlike modern chlorophyll, which today gives plants their green color, reported researchers at Australian National University, where the bacterial fossils were studied.

While it is rare for ancient chlorophyll to be preserved, these samples were probably formed when a bloom of cyanobacteria quickly sank to the sea floor where it was free from the oxygen molecules that bolster decay. Once it sank, the microbes eventually fossilized and the rock they became part of remained motionless — and in one piece — for a billion years.

Now That's Interesting 

 
Photosynthesis uses chlorophyll, the green pigment found in almost all types of plants, to capture and convert energy into food.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

Why Do We Scratch Our Heads When We're Thinking?

Some people believe that certain automatic gestures — like scratching our heads when we're thinking — are natural motions that were passed down to us from our caveman predecessors. JOSE LUIS PELAEZ INC./GETTY IMAGES If you've ever had the distinct pleasure of sourcing stock photos for any reason, you've likely come across a whole lot of laughing women eating salads alone . But you've also probably stumbled upon a truckload of people scratching their heads to symbolize confusion, deep thought and/or perhaps a bad case of seborrheic dermatitis — dandruff. Scalp dryness aside, how exactly did the head scratch come to symbolize intellectual processes? Some people believe that certain automatic gestures are simply natural, expressive motions our caveman predecessors passed down to us. "One popular explanation for any hand-to-head movements is that they're frustrated aggression — a reversion to the natural movements of our rock-throwing ancestors," wrote Sa...

How Do You Evict Your Freeloading Friend?

Guest Trisha just told you she's not leaving your house. How can you get her OUT? It was supposed to be just a few weeks. That was the deal. Your college friend Trisha was blindsided by her husband filing for divorce and needed a place to crash until she could find her own apartment. She's always been a bit of a mess, but you couldn't turn your back on a friend in need, right? Now "a few weeks" has turned into eight months. In the beginning, she at least pretended to browse Craigslist for cheap sublets and part-time work, but now she doesn't do much of anything, unless binge-watching Netflix can be considered a full-time job. You finally work up the nerve to ask Trisha to leave. Your place is just too small and your boyfriend thinks she's a leech, eating all your food and never offering a dime for groceries, let alone rent. You break the news gently to Trisha; she has to be out by the end of the month. And then she breaks the news to you: Nope, she...

Subtle ways to change your life - Nudge theory.

The nudge theory The theory states that small changes when subtly encouraged can lead to big results . The nudge theory enables us to focus on the minuscule aspects of our life that makes up the big goal or the main objective we desire. The subtle tasks could include setting your alarm 5minutes earlier to encourage you to be prompt. This is a typical example of you nudging yourself to becoming a major partaker in your life’s goals. Hence, there are 7 main steps to encourage you to nudge yourself to task completion: 1. Pursue a single goal that contributes to your well-being, set targets and deadlines: As humans, we tend to fixate on goals we think makes us happy. Say for example, your goal may be to buy a sport car which you think makes you happy, the irony is that it isn’t realistic. Even according to research, the 5 top factors that improves well-being are: social relationship, health and activity, generosity, learning new things and building curiosity. So, it is very impor...