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Andrew H. Knoll

Andrew H. Knoll

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Harvard University

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Funding$140k
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Research topics

  • Biology
  • Geology
  • Paleontology
  • Ecology
  • Astronomy
  • Astrobiology
  • Atmospheric sciences
  • Physical geography
  • Geochemistry
  • Evolutionary biology
  • Chemistry
  • Environmental science
  • Physics
  • Geography

Selected publications

  • Biomineralization: Integrating mechanism and evolutionary history

    Science Advances · 2022 · 293 citations

    Senior authorCorresponding
    • Ecology
    • Evolutionary biology
    • Biology

    Calcium carbonate (CaCO 3 ) biomineralizing organisms have played major roles in the history of life and the global carbon cycle during the past 541 Ma. Both marine diversification and mass extinctions reflect physiological responses to environmental changes through time. An integrated understanding of carbonate biomineralization is necessary to illuminate this evolutionary record and to understand how modern organisms will respond to 21st century global change. Biomineralization evolved independently but convergently across phyla, suggesting a unity of mechanism that transcends biological differences. In this review, we combine CaCO 3 skeleton formation mechanisms with constraints from evolutionary history, omics, and a meta-analysis of isotopic data to develop a plausible model for CaCO 3 biomineralization applicable to all phyla. The model provides a framework for understanding the environmental sensitivity of marine calcifiers, past mass extinctions, and resilience in 21st century acidifying oceans. Thus, it frames questions about the past, present, and future of CaCO 3 biomineralizing organisms.

  • A persistently low level of atmospheric oxygen in Earth’s middle age

    Nature Communications · 2021 · 109 citations

    • Atmospheric sciences
    • Environmental science
    • Geography

    of about 1% of present atmospheric level through most of the Proterozoic Eon (2.4 to 0.65 Ga).

  • Taphonomy of Biosignatures in Microbial Mats on Little Ambergris Cay, Turks and Caicos Islands

    Frontiers in Earth Science · 2020 · 21 citations

    Senior authorCorresponding
    • Geology
    • Ecology
    • Geochemistry

    Microbial mats are taxonomically and metabolically diverse microbial ecosystems, with a characteristic layering that reflects vertical gradients in light and oxygen availability. Silicified microbial mats in Proterozoic carbonate successions are generally interpreted in terms of the surficial, mat building community. However, information about biodiversity in the once-surface-layer can be lost through decay as the mats accrete. To better understand how information about surface microbial communities is impacted by processes of decay within the mat, we studied microbial mats from Little Ambergris Cay, Turks and Caicos Islands. We used molecular techniques, microscopy and geochemistry to investigate microbial mat taphonomy— how processes of degradation affect biological signatures in sedimentary rocks, including fossils, molecular fossils and isotopic records. The top <1 cm of these mats host cyanobacteria-rich communities overlying and admixed with diverse bacterial and eukaryotic taxa. Lower layers contain abundant, often empty, sheaths of large filamentous cyanobacteria, preserving their record as key mat-builders. Morphological remains and free lipid biomarkers of several bacterial groups, as well as diatoms, arthropods, and other eukaryotes also persist in lower mat layers, although at lower abundances than in surface layers. Carbon isotope signatures of organic matter were consistent with the majority of the biomass being sourced from CO2-limited cyanobacteria. Porewater sulfide sulfur isotope values were lower than seawater sulfate sulfur isotope values by ~ 45 to 50‰, consistent with microbial sulfate reduction under sulfate-replete conditions. Our findings provide insight into how processes of degradation and decay bias biosignatures in the geological record of microbial mats, especially mats that formed widely during the Proterozoic (2,500-541 million years ago) Eon. Cyanobacteria were the key mat-builders, their robust and cohesive fabric retained at depth. Additionally, eukaryotic remains and eukaryotic biosignatures were preserved at depth, which suggests that microbial mats are not inherently biased against eukaryote preservation, either today or in the past.

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