Science & technology | The ancient atmosphere

Time capsules

A new way to chart the rise of oxygen

OXYGEN makes up a fifth of the atmosphere (20.9%, to be precise), but that has not always been so. For the first 2 billion years of Earth’s existence, before photosynthetic organisms became common, there was no chemically uncombined oxygen in the air at all. Even after that, the gas remained scarce for hundreds of millions of years. By 575m years ago, however—which was when animals whose dimensions are measured in centimetres rather than microns appear—there must have been enough oxygen around to support their respiration. The usual guess is that the gas’s levels began to rise about 700m years ago. But a guess it is.

This article appeared in the Science & technology section of the print edition under the headline “Time capsules”

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From the July 30th 2016 edition

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