Walter M R
School of Earth Sciences, Macquarie University, NSW, Australia.
Ciba Found Symp. 1996;202:112-27; discussion 127-30. doi: 10.1002/9780470514986.ch7.
Thermal springs are common in the oceans and on land. Early in the history of the Earth they would have been even more abundant, because of a higher heat flow. A thermophilic lifestyle has been proposed for the common ancestor of extant life, and hydrothermal ecosystems can be expected to have existed on Earth since life arose. Though there has been a great deal of recent research on this topic by biologists, palaeobiologists have done little to explore ancient high temperature environments. Exploration geologists and miners have long known the importance of hydrothermal systems, as they are sources for much of our gold, silver, copper, lead and zinc. Such systems are particularly abundant in Archaean and Proterozoic successions. Despite the rarity of systematic searches of these by palaeobiologists, already 12 fossiliferous Phanerozoic deposits are known. Five are 'black smoker' type submarine deposits that formed in the deep ocean and preserve a vent fauna like that in the modern oceans; the oldest is Devonian. Three are from shallow marine deposits of Carboniferous age. As well as 'worm tubes', several of these contain morphological or isotopic evidence of microbial life. The oldest well established fossiliferous submarine thermal spring deposit is Cambro-Ordovician; microorganisms of at least three or four types are preserved in this. One example each of Carboniferous and Jurassic sub-lacustrine fossiliferous thermal springs are known. There are two convincing examples of fossiliferous subaerial hydrothermal deposits. Both are Devonian. Several known Proterozoic and Archaean deposits are likely to preserve a substantial palaeobiological record, and all the indications are that there must be numerous deposits suitable for study. Already it is demonstrable that in ancient thermal spring deposits there is a record of microbial communities preserved as stromatolites, microfossils, isotope distribution patterns and hydrocarbon biomarkers.
温泉在海洋和陆地都很常见。在地球历史早期,由于热流较高,温泉可能更为丰富。有人提出嗜热的生活方式是现存生命共同祖先的特征,自生命出现以来,地球上可能就存在热液生态系统。尽管生物学家最近对这一主题进行了大量研究,但古生物学家在探索古代高温环境方面做得很少。勘探地质学家和矿工早就知道热液系统的重要性,因为它们是我们大量金、银、铜、铅和锌的来源。这类系统在太古代和元古代地层中尤为丰富。尽管古生物学家很少对这些地层进行系统搜索,但已知的显生宙含化石矿床已有12个。其中5个是“黑烟囱”型海底矿床,形成于深海,保存着与现代海洋类似的喷口动物群;最古老的是泥盆纪的。3个来自石炭纪的浅海沉积物。除了“虫管”,其中一些还包含微生物生命的形态或同位素证据。最古老的、有充分证据的含化石海底温泉矿床是寒武纪-奥陶纪的;其中保存了至少三四种类型的微生物。已知石炭纪和侏罗纪湖底含化石温泉各有一个例子。有两个令人信服的陆地热液含化石矿床实例。两者都是泥盆纪的。几个已知的元古代和太古代矿床可能保存了大量古生物学记录,所有迹象表明,一定有许多适合研究的矿床。已经可以证明,在古代温泉矿床中,有作为叠层石、微化石、同位素分布模式和烃类生物标志物保存下来的微生物群落记录。