Scientific News Hypotheses Hypotheses of changes on the Earth UNDERGRAD FINDS CLUES TO 400- MILLION-YEAR-OLD MYSTERY
UNDERGRAD FINDS
CLUES TO 400- MILLION-YEAR-OLD MYSTERY
Steven Porter, a Johns Hopkins
University senior from Cherry Hill, N.J., has conducted original research that
adds new and potentially decisive evidence to a debate about the identity of one
of the first organisms to make the epochal leap from the sea to dry land
approximately 400 million years ago.
As one of 42 Johns Hopkins
students who received Provost's Undergraduate Research Awards in the 2001-2002
academic year, Porter will present an overview of his project during an upcoming
awards ceremony. It will run from 3 p.m. to 6 p.m. on Thursday, March 7, in the
Glass Pavilion on the Homewood campus, 3400 N. Charles St., in Baltimore.
Although he's a pre-med student majoring in English,
Porter sought out an undergraduate experience in laboratory research that would
allow him to explore areas beyond his training in molecular biology and cellular
biology. Through a Web site devoted to undergraduate research opportunities at
Johns Hopkins, he connected with Hope Jahren, an assistant professor in the Department
of Earth and Planetary Sciences in the university's Krieger School of Arts
and Sciences.
Jahren's lab analyzes isotopes of
elements like carbon, nitrogen and oxygen in living and fossilized plants to
better understand their relationship to contemporary and prehistoric climates.
Isotopes are forms of an element that differ only by the addition of one or more
subatomic particles known as neutrons. Different isotopes of the same element
have different mass, which affects the way plants use them.
Porter chose to study a unique,
high-quality fossil specimen of Spongiophyton minutissimum from Jahren's
collection of fossils. Kept in a sealed vial, the specimen is a little bigger
than a dime and dates from the Devonian Period, a time about 400 million years
ago when the seas of Earth teemed with life but the continents were barren
wastelands. "Now, look at that morphology [shape]," Jahren asks when
showing the fossil sample to a visitor. "It's very tough to get much
insight into what type of organism this was based solely on its shape, but a
look at certain aspects of its chemistry that have been preserved in the fossil
may help give us more clues."
Whatever it is, Jahren notes, the
sample probably represents a crucial step from life at home only in the sea to
the types of life that could spread over land over the course of millions of
years.
To learn more about the fossil,
Porter resolved to compare it to its nearest modern relatives. But based on
studies of the shapes of various fossil samples of Spongiophyton minutissimum,
paleontologists were divided into two schools of thought on what those nearest
relatives were. Some thought the fossil was an example of a bryophyte, a class
of plants comprised mostly of mosses; and some favored the idea that the fossil
was a lichen, which is a close association between a fungus and an alga.
Porter conducted an extensive
literature search to familiarize himself with the debate, and then sought the
advice of experts in the field to further firm up his understanding. He relishes
the fact that he was able to use his inexperience in the field to get a chance
to speak with prominent people in it.
"My naivete paid off,"
Porter says. "I probably would have been much more intimidated talking to
these people, since they are very much the leaders of their fields."
Thanks in part to the advice and
assistance of people like Paula DePriest, an associate curator in the department
of botany at the Smithsonian Institution, Porter was able to select a range of
contemporary species of mosses and lichens to test with the fossil. Using
training and equipment from Jahren's lab, he looked at the isotopes of carbon
found in each group and in the fossil, and found that the types of carbon in the
fossil more closely resembled those found in modern lichens.
"It's very clear from these
results that the fossil cycled carbon in a manner that much more closely
resembles that of the lichens than it does the bryophytes," Jahren comments.
"Why does that matter? This is one important piece of how we go from
sterile land to what we have today. This tells us the type of biology that was
most effective, at the very beginning, was the strategy of the lichen, not the
moss."
Porter and Jahren hope to present
the results at an upcoming meeting of the Geophysical Society of America. Both
agreed that Porter has come away with valuable insight into what the process of
scientific research is like.
"He's learned that it's
labor-intensive work, but that there's a lasting effect to birthing a new piece
of knowledge," Jahren says. "I think he also recognizes as a result of
his provost project the amount of luck, in addition to good planning, that goes
into research."
Contact: Michael Purdy
mcp@jhu.edu
410-516-7160
Johns Hopkins University
Source of the given news and the copyrights belong to a Johns Hopkins University
Publishing date: March 13, 2002
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