The Harvard Team is an interactive group of biogeochemists,
paleontologists, sedimentary geologists, geochemists, and tectonic geologists
assembled with the common goal of understanding the coevolution of life
and environments in Earth history. With a multidisciplinary approach,
the Team research focuses on three critical intervals of planetary change
and major transitions in the evolution of life on Earth:
The
early Paleoproterozoic, when oxygen began to accumulate in the atmosphere and
surface ocean (2400-2200 Ma) The terminal Proterozoic
and Early Cambrian, when animal life radiated (750-525 Ma) The
Permo-Triassic boundary, when mass extinction removed some 90 percent of Earth's
species diversity, permanently altering the course of evolution (251 Ma)
A
primary broad research concept for the Harvard Team is this: The Planetary Context
of Biological Evolution. Research endeavors focus on critical intervals of Earth
change, as indicated by the first four research areas below, each with associated
projects. Proterozoic Oxidation of the Earth's
Surface Characterize molybdenum isotopic compositions
in black shales, sea sediments, ferromanganese nodules, continental molybdenites,
and seawater for insight on environmental redox or fractionation conditions Geochemical
study of mid-Proterozoic black shales deposited during maximum flooding in of
McArthur Basin, northern Australia Investigate concept
that the deep sea was sulfidic, rather than oxic from 1850 Ma until at least 1200-1000
Ma ago, with study of related observations Study ecological
patterns, abundance, and diversity of microfossil assemblages in the siliciclastic
Roper Group, northern Australia
Neoproterozoic-Cambrian
Environmental Change and Evolution
Paleontology,
geochronology, tectonics, and environmental changes of this period, looking for
models of integrated change in the Earth system
Geochronological
work on volcanic ashes to constrain ages of fossil embryos in terminal Proterozoic
phosphorites from China, determine the age of Chinese glacial deposits, and the
tempo of the Cambrian explosion; also work on Newfoundland ash beds associated
with Neoproterozoic glacials Investigate
trace fossils in India, with current results indicating that Kajrahat limestone
is of Paleoproterozoic age; work continues on its bedding features Study
Precambrian-Cambrian boundary age in Oman by drilling core ashes to study fossil
evidence, glacial deposits, and tempo of changes in carbon and strontium isotopic
signatures Test uranium-lead geochronology
methods to determine error and confidence levels for geochronolongy time periods
Investigate new findings on molecular
development, related to understanding early animal evolution Namibia
Project: Investigate events preceding low-altitude glaciation in northern Namibia Svalbard
Project: Investigate a sequence having lithologic and isotopic signatures of "cap"
carbonates (purportedly diagnostic of snowball earth deglaciations) Morocco
Project: Study dateable volcanic rocks (from the latest Neoproterozoic (Vendian)
continental shelf through Early Cambrian marine facies) to improve Vendian event
chronology and investigate its continental-marine environments and biota Mackenzie
Mountains (NW Canada) Project: Investigate the timing of banded iron formation
sedimentation (relative to the history of glaciation) and examine sections of
the cap carbonates in glacial diamictites Field
studies in Namibia and Oman for sedimentologic, geochemical, paleontologic, and
geochronological investigations of the Precambrian-Cambrian boundary, designed
to assess rates of evolution, taxonomic diversity, and metazoan ecology below
and above the boundary Develop digital
technologies for outcrop mapping, with application of differential GPS to acquire
high-resolution maps of geologic features, plus testing laser-based range finders
and theodolite total stations Determine
distribution of diagnostic mat signatures in ancient siliciclastic rocks (among
the diagnostic signatures of life that could be reliably identified in the 2003
Mars rover mission) Explore models of
coupled environmental and biological changes at the end of the Proterozoic Eon,
plus develop high precision measurements of calcium isotopes to investigate biomineralization
in Proterozoic sediments
Permo-Triassic
Mass Extinction Causes and Biological Consequences Consider
physical/biogeochemical mechanisms in the end-Permian mass extinction, with development
of paleo ocean circulation models, using them to drive biogeochemical models Study
timing of the end-Permian mass extinction (considering planetary or extraplanetary
processes causing this great extinction) plus biological recovery following the
extinction, which set the subsequent course of evolution on Earth Utilize
modified standard electron microprobe techniques to make micron-scale elemental
maps of silicified plants and provide direct tests of taphonomic hypotheses on
silica permineralization (high-resolution, non-destructive microchemical assays
critical in Mars sample analysis) Use
NMR and soft X-ray techniques to examine lignified tissue distribution in early
plants
Molecular and Isotopic
Approaches to Microbial Ecology and Biogeochemistry Isotopic characterization
of molecular biosignatures, to understand the functional and systematic relationships
of microorganisms in natural ecosystems Isotopic analyses
of nucleic acids, using probe-capture techniques for isolation of specific nucleic
acids Bacterial fractionations of hydrogen isotopes
from methanotrophic bacteria Carbon-isotopic biogeochemical
studies, using hydrothermal vent microbial communities
Investigate how methane functioned in Earth's early atmosphere with studies of
how methanogenesis occurs in modern sediments and calculating rates of microbial
reactions Develop calcium isotope measurements with
high precision to investigate biomineralization in Proterozoic sediments
Additional
research endeavors for the Harvard Team are these final two areas:
See Team Research Plan |