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Work
in progress
Photographic montage
with mirrored foil
5" x 6"
Original image - Lake Clifton Yalgorup National Park
Western Australia
Rock-like
structures known as thrombolites can be seen on the edge of Lake
Clifton. Like the famous stromatolites of Hamelin Pool, in Shark
Bay, the thrombolites are built by micro-organisms too small for
the human eye to see. Within the structures of Lake Clifton, are
living communities of diverse inhabitants with population densities
of 3000 per square metre!
The thrombolite-building micro-organisms of Lake Clifton resemble
the earliest forms of life on Earth. The discovery of modern examples
helped scientists to understand the significance of micro-organisms
in the environment and unravel the long history of life on Earth.
These organisms were the only known form of life on Earth from
3500 million to 650 million years ago. The thrombolites and stromatolites
they constructed dominated the clear, shallow seas of this period
and formed extensive reef tracts rivalling those of modern coral
reefs. Similar organisms, for instance, helped to form the rich
iron-ore deposits of the Hamersley Range, in the Pilbara's Karijini
National Park, some 2000 million years ago. At this time oxygen
made up only one per cent of the atmosphere. When there was no
more iron to precipitate, the free oxygen leaked into the atmosphere
until it formed 21 per cent of atmospheric gases.
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