Pocket-sized Stromatolite Fossil

stromatolite
Fossil 8cm across.
stromatolite

These stromatolites, seen in cross section in this fossil, are each just the size of a finger nail. My namesake, geologist Richard T Bell, found them in a rock formation while surveying in remote area of Canada, if I remember correctly, somewhere in the Rocky Mountains.

stromatolite
Cross section of stromatolite, 1.8 cm across

A stromatolite is a community of micro-organisms forming one layer on top of another. Colonies of cyanobacteria released oxygen into Earth’s atmosphere 3 billion years ago, leading to a mass extinction of anaerobic bacteria but, a billion years later, creating the conditions which would allow multicellular life to appear in the world’s oceans.

Stromatolites

From my wildyorkshire.co.uk blog, 19 November 2010:

THESE TINY stromatolites in a fossil from Canada, each about one inch across, were built up layer by layer on the seabed from calcium carbonate secreted by cyanobacteria, also known as blue-green algae. Once thought to be algae, they’re now grouped with the bacteria and, along with archaea, classified as prokaryotes.

Prokaryote cells have DNA but unlike eukaryotes the cells have no membrane-bound nucleus. We’re made up of eukaryote cells but our health depends on a variety of prokaryote cells – the ‘friendly bacteria’ in advertisements for Yakult fermented milk drink – that are active in our digestive systems.

Stromatolites appear right at the start of the fossil record 3,800 million years ago and they’re still with us today, in places like Shark Bay, Australia, where extreme conditions limit competition from other life forms. Stromatolites are often much larger than my pocket-sized examples – the size of a family car, for example.

Ferrybridge
Ferrybridge Power Station, 2010. As Britain achieves 50% renewable energy supply, Ferrybridge is being phased out. They blew up one of the cooling towers on 28 July 2019.
Malham Cove

Blue-green algae can be seen close to home as streaks on the cooling towers of power stations, such as Ferrybridge. The blackish streaks of blue-green algae at Malham Cove (right) gave Charles Kingsley the idea that they might have been made by a chimney sweep’s boy sliding down the face of the cliff, inspiring his story The Water Babies.

Microscopic as they are, the cyanobacteria were crucial in the story of life as they were the first organisms to use photosynthesis, releasing oxygen into the atmosphere. Cyanobacteria contain not only chlorophyll a, a green pigment, but also blue phycobilin, which combine to give the blue-green, almost blackish colour.

Link

Meeting Richard T Bell, from my wildyorkshire.co.uk diary, 30 March 2007.

Run-off

washed-out paving sand
washed-out paving sand

After a record-breaking late summer bank holiday with temperatures of 28C in Leeds, we had a downpour yesterday evening. The paving sand that I’d swept into the cracks a couple of days ago has been washed out in places by the overspill from our driveway. The dished concrete channel in front of the garage door can’t cope with the run-off from a rainstorm.

It’s been a good test for a small area. I’ll buy a small bag of cement and make a dry mix – three of sand to one of cement – with the remaining sand to brush into the crevices on the sloping driveway.

Wadi Rum

Wadi Rum, Google Earth image
The swirling shapes of my little patches of washed-out sand remind me of the run-off deposits that are left by flash floods in wadis, as in this Google Earth image from the Wadi Rum Protected Area, Jordan.

Link

Dansand No Grow Block Paving Sand: I now realise that I should have gone for the version that they do with added cement!