*** Welcome to piglix ***

Diskagma buttonii

Diskagma
Temporal range: 2200 Ma
Diskagma holotype.tif
Diskagma buttonii holotype, in thin section of 2200 million year old Waterval Onder paleosol, South Africa
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Division: Glomeromycota
Order: Archaeosporales
Genus: Diskagma
Retallack (2013)
Type species
Diskagma buttonii
Retallack (2013)

Diskagma ("disc-like fragment") is a genus of problematic fossil from a Paleoproterozoic (2200 million years old) paleosol from South Africa, and significant as the oldest likely eukaryote and earliest evidence for life on land.

Diskagma buttonii is a small fossil less than 1mm in length found within the surface horizon of a Vertisol paleosol above the Hekpoort Basalt dated to 2200 million years old. The opacity of the matrix and the size of the fossil meant that its three dimensional structure required imaging by computer-assisted x-ray tomography using a cyclotron source The fossils are shaped like an urn with an apical cup, which is filled with filamentous structures whose exact nature is uncertain due to recrystallization of the matrix under greenschist facies metamorphism. The base of these hollow urns is a system of hollow tubes running over the paleosol and connecting the urns into groups. The walls of Diskagma have scattered spiny or tubular extensions.

Diskagma buttonii is a problematic fossil that has been named before its biological affinities have been understood. Its size and complexity suggest that it had the degree of cytoskeletal complexity found in eukaryotes, but it predates the other fossil candidate for the oldest eukaryote Grypania, now known to be 1800 million years old, and at 2200 million years old is much older than molecular clock estimates for eukaryotes of 1600 million years. Another similar fossil is Horodyskia. The size and hollow shape of Diskagma are similar to the living fungus Geosiphon, which is endosymbiotic with the cyanobacterium . However, the apical cup and filaments are not seen in modern Geosiphon.


...
Wikipedia

...