Saturday, December 20, 2025
ADVT 
National

Scientists Challenge Claim That Labrador Is Site Of Planet's Oldest Life

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 13 May, 2019 07:55 PM

    A team of geological researchers is challenging claims that some of the earliest forms of known life existed in northern Labrador.


    The argument that a rocky outcrop showed evidence of life going back 3.95 billion years was presented by Japanese scientists in 2017 using isotopic evidence, sometimes called "chemofossils."


    A team of scientists led by Martin Whitehouse, a professor of geosciences at the Swedish Museum of Natural History, agrees the ancient signatures of life are present in the Torngat mountain region.


    However, the Swedish-funded research concludes the rocks that surrounded the evidence of life are much younger than the Japanese research indicates — meaning the life itself is also likely hundreds of millions of years younger.


    Whitehouse's team looked at the same outcrops as the Japanese but came up with a differing mapping of the geology.


    The rocks being examined are in the Saglek Bay area, at the southern end of the Torngat Mountains National Park, in an area where some of the oldest continental crusts are exposed to the surface.


    The findings were published in the journal, Precambrian Research, in January.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    'I'm A Little Numb:' Killer Of B.C. Gas Station Attendant Grant De Patie Dies

    BLIND BAY, B.C. — The mother of a British Columbia gas station attendant dragged to death under a vehicle more than a decade ago, says she is "numb" to learn her son's killer has died.

    'I'm A Little Numb:' Killer Of B.C. Gas Station Attendant Grant De Patie Dies

    Cheetahs Will Not Prosper In B.C.: Panel Rejects Permit Request For Two Big Cats

    The owners of two cheetahs will not be allowed to return the large, African cats to southeastern British Columbia to use them as ambassador animals promoting conservation of the endangered species.

    Cheetahs Will Not Prosper In B.C.: Panel Rejects Permit Request For Two Big Cats

    B.C. Judge Orders RCMP To Give Meng Data On Devices Seized During Arrest

    Justice Heather Holmes of the British Columbia Supreme Court says the RCMP must make copies for Meng Wanzhou of data on an iPhone, an iPad, a Macbook Air, a Huawei phone, two SIM cards and a flash drive.

    B.C. Judge Orders RCMP To Give Meng Data On Devices Seized During Arrest

    Trans Woman Hopes Funding Cut Will Send Message To Vancouver Rape Crisis Group

    "The organization is not bad," said Nixon. "It just means that attitudes have to change."    

    Trans Woman Hopes Funding Cut Will Send Message To Vancouver Rape Crisis Group

    Sir John A. Macdonald Statue Vandalized Again In Downtown Montreal

    Vandals struck a Sir John A. Macdonald statue in downtown Montreal once again, spray painting the imposing bronze monument to the country's first prime minister early Thursday.

    Sir John A. Macdonald Statue Vandalized Again In Downtown Montreal

    Wilson-Raybould To Reveal More Details, Documents On SNC-Lavalin Affair

    OTTAWA — Jody Wilson-Raybould plans to reveal more — in writing — about her accusation that she faced improper pressure to prevent the criminal prosecution of SNC-Lavalin.

    Wilson-Raybould To Reveal More Details, Documents On SNC-Lavalin Affair