World's Oldest Pigment Found: Ancient Pink Chlorophyll Offers Insight into Earth's Early Life

July 13, 2025
World's Oldest Pigment Found: Ancient Pink Chlorophyll Offers Insight into Earth's Early Life
  • Scientists have uncovered the oldest known pigment, preserved for over a billion years in ancient cyanobacteria from Mauritania's Taoudeni Basin, marking a groundbreaking discovery in Earth's history.

  • This pigment is notably 600 million years older than any previously discovered, offering unprecedented insights into early life on Earth.

  • The pigment, identified by graduate student Nur Gueneli, turned bright pink when exposed to an organic solvent, revealing fossilized chlorophyll from ancient blue-green algae.

  • Senior researcher Jochen Brocks compared the significance of this find to discovering dinosaur skin that still retains its original colors, emphasizing its importance for understanding Earth's past.

  • The discovery prompts questions about the environmental conditions that delayed the emergence of complex life, despite the oxygen produced by cyanobacteria.

  • Findings suggest that while cyanobacteria dominated ancient oceans, their proliferation may have created an evolutionary bottleneck, impacting the development of more complex organisms.

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