Close Menu
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release

Subscribe to Updates

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

What's On
The case for potential Nets prize AJ Dybantsa: KD-style midrange, comeback desperation, breakfast with Dickie V

The case for potential Nets prize AJ Dybantsa: KD-style midrange, comeback desperation, breakfast with Dickie V

December 9, 2025
Exclusive | The real horrors of the ‘scromiting’ weed disorder plaguing ERs — from dwindling to 87 pounds to ‘nonstop puking’ for a week

Exclusive | The real horrors of the ‘scromiting’ weed disorder plaguing ERs — from dwindling to 87 pounds to ‘nonstop puking’ for a week

December 9, 2025
Trump says Ukraine should hold elections despite wartime prohibition: ‘People should have that choice’

Trump says Ukraine should hold elections despite wartime prohibition: ‘People should have that choice’

December 9, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
Trending
  • The case for potential Nets prize AJ Dybantsa: KD-style midrange, comeback desperation, breakfast with Dickie V
  • Exclusive | The real horrors of the ‘scromiting’ weed disorder plaguing ERs — from dwindling to 87 pounds to ‘nonstop puking’ for a week
  • Trump says Ukraine should hold elections despite wartime prohibition: ‘People should have that choice’
  • Marjorie Taylor Greene says she will vote against the NDAA
  • Gwyneth Paltrow and Brad Falchuk: A Timeline of Their Relationship
  • How ACC commissioner Jim Phillips responded to Notre Dame’s scathing CFP criticism
  • It’s time to close the radio loophole and deliver fair pay for America’s musicians
  • Brandon Blackstock’s Daughter Savannah Praises His Partner Brittney for Keeping His ‘Dreams’ Alive After Death
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact Us
Join Us
USA TimesUSA Times
Newsletter Login
  • Home
  • United States
  • World
  • Politics
  • Business
  • Lifestyle
  • Entertainment
  • Health
  • Science
  • Tech
  • Sports
  • More
    • Web Stories
    • Editor’s Picks
    • Press Release
USA TimesUSA Times
Home » Breakup of ancient supercontinent Nuna created ‘incubators’ for complex life, study finds
Breakup of ancient supercontinent Nuna created ‘incubators’ for complex life, study finds
Science

Breakup of ancient supercontinent Nuna created ‘incubators’ for complex life, study finds

News RoomBy News RoomNovember 10, 20251 ViewsNo Comments

The breakup of the ancient supercontinent Nuna during Earth’s “Boring Billion” years drastically shook up the planet, and the reshuffle may have created the conditions that gave rise to complex life, new research shows in unprecedented detail.

The Boring Billion refers to the period between 1.8 billion and 800 million years ago. Even though this interval encompassed the breakup and assembly of two ancient supercontinents, Nuna and Rodinia, scientists gave the period this name due to a perceived lack of upheaval.

“The term was coined to describe what appeared to be a long interval of geochemical, climatic, and biological stability in Earth’s history,” Dietmar Müller, a professor of geophysics at the University of Sydney who led the new research, told Live Science in an email. “However, we now know that this interval was less boring in terms of plate tectonics and evolutionary changes than previously thought.”


You may like

MOR CO2 outgassing and crustal storage with passive margins – YouTube


Watch On

Nuna’s breakup set off a chain of events that made Earth more hospitable to life, according to a study published Oct. 27 in the journal Earth and Planetary Science Letters. As pieces of Nuna drifted away from the supercontinent’s core, shallow seas mushroomed in the gaps between them that were more temperate and oxygen-rich than previous oceans had been, first-of-their-kind simulations revealed.

The researchers reconstructed tectonic-plate movements and related changes in carbon storage and emissions over the past 1.8 billion years, using a cutting-edge model they recently released. The novelty of the method lies in its ability to reconstruct carbon fluxes in greater detail than has been possible so far, the team wrote in the study.

Over the course of 350 million years during the Boring Billion, the total length of shallow seas around landmasses doubled to about 81,000 miles (130,000 kilometers), equivalent to more than three times Earth’s circumference at the equator, the team found. At the same time, subduction zones — where one tectonic plate dives beneath another — shortened overall due to how the plates were shifting, according to the study.

Subduction zones trigger volcanic activity at the surface because they inject seawater that lowers the melting temperature of rocks into Earth’s mantle, the layer that sits beneath the crust. This facilitates the formation of magma, which then rises into the crust and erupts from volcanoes along with debris and gases such as carbon dioxide (CO2).

Get the world’s most fascinating discoveries delivered straight to your inbox.

As subduction zones shortened, the amount of CO2 escaping from Earth’s interior into the atmosphere decreased. This cooled the planet and helped establish the oxygen-rich conditions in the newly formed shallow seas, and these relatively stable ecosystems gave rise to more complex life than had existed so far, the researchers suggested.

“We think these vast continental shelves and shallow seas were crucial ecological incubators,” study co-author Juraj Farkaš, an associate professor in the School of Physics, Chemistry and Earth Sciences at the University of Adelaide in Australia, said in a statement. “They provided tectonically and geochemically stable marine environments with presumably elevated levels of nutrients and oxygen, which in turn were critical for more complex lifeforms to evolve and diversify on our planet.”

Specifically, shallow seas may have sped up the diversification of eukaryotes — organisms whose cells have specialized structures called organelles and a membrane-bound nucleus that houses the DNA. All animals, plants and fungi are eukaryotes, so the emergence of eukaryotic cells during the Boring Billion was a key step in the evolution of complex life, the study authors proposed.


You may like

Researchers already knew that eukaryotes evolved during the Boring Billion thanks to fossil evidence dating to 1.05 billion years ago. But the conditions under which these organisms emerged remained unclear.

“The breakup of Nuna created a lot of new ocean floor in young ocean basins that previously did not exist,” Müller explained. And this ocean floor contributed to the decline of atmospheric CO2 already triggered by the shortening of subduction zones, he said. That’s because when seawater seeps into cracks in the seabed, carbon gets stripped out to make limestone.

“This ocean floor was altered by hydrothermal fluid circulation and stored carbon in the form of carbonate cements in voids and fractures, drawing down atmospheric CO2,” Müller said.

In short, ancient supercontinent Nuna’s breakup sparked three major changes that benefited complex life: It created shallow seas, diminished outgassing from volcanoes, and locked carbon away in ocean sediments, leading to a more oxygen-rich atmosphere and temperate conditions.

“The next steps will be to discover more well preserved eukaryote fossils to document their earliest evolution,” Müller concluded.

Share. Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Telegram WhatsApp Email

Keep Reading

Is the ‘Star of Bethlehem’ really a planet? A bright visitor this month may hold a clue.

Is the ‘Star of Bethlehem’ really a planet? A bright visitor this month may hold a clue.

Rare ‘sunglint’ transforms Alabama River into a giant ‘golden dragon’ — Earth from space

Rare ‘sunglint’ transforms Alabama River into a giant ‘golden dragon’ — Earth from space

Glue strong enough to tow a car made from used cooking oil

Glue strong enough to tow a car made from used cooking oil

Historic search for ‘huge missing piece’ of the universe turns up negative — but reveals new secrets of particle physics

Historic search for ‘huge missing piece’ of the universe turns up negative — but reveals new secrets of particle physics

Today’s biggest science news: Kilauea lava fountains | Northern Lights forecast | Comet 3I/ATLAS activity

Today’s biggest science news: Kilauea lava fountains | Northern Lights forecast | Comet 3I/ATLAS activity

Ash Pendant: The only known depiction of a pregnant Viking woman

Ash Pendant: The only known depiction of a pregnant Viking woman

The ‘hobbits’ may have died out when drought forced them to compete with modern humans, new research suggests

The ‘hobbits’ may have died out when drought forced them to compete with modern humans, new research suggests

Lost Indigenous settlements described by Jamestown colonist John Smith finally found

Lost Indigenous settlements described by Jamestown colonist John Smith finally found

Strangely bleached rocks on Mars hint that the Red Planet was once a tropical oasis

Strangely bleached rocks on Mars hint that the Red Planet was once a tropical oasis

Add A Comment
Leave A Reply Cancel Reply

Editors Picks

Exclusive | The real horrors of the ‘scromiting’ weed disorder plaguing ERs — from dwindling to 87 pounds to ‘nonstop puking’ for a week

Exclusive | The real horrors of the ‘scromiting’ weed disorder plaguing ERs — from dwindling to 87 pounds to ‘nonstop puking’ for a week

December 9, 2025
Trump says Ukraine should hold elections despite wartime prohibition: ‘People should have that choice’

Trump says Ukraine should hold elections despite wartime prohibition: ‘People should have that choice’

December 9, 2025
Marjorie Taylor Greene says she will vote against the NDAA

Marjorie Taylor Greene says she will vote against the NDAA

December 9, 2025
Gwyneth Paltrow and Brad Falchuk: A Timeline of Their Relationship

Gwyneth Paltrow and Brad Falchuk: A Timeline of Their Relationship

December 9, 2025

Subscribe to News

Get the latest USA news and updates directly to your inbox.

Latest News
How ACC commissioner Jim Phillips responded to Notre Dame’s scathing CFP criticism

How ACC commissioner Jim Phillips responded to Notre Dame’s scathing CFP criticism

December 9, 2025
It’s time to close the radio loophole and deliver fair pay for America’s musicians

It’s time to close the radio loophole and deliver fair pay for America’s musicians

December 9, 2025
Brandon Blackstock’s Daughter Savannah Praises His Partner Brittney for Keeping His ‘Dreams’ Alive After Death

Brandon Blackstock’s Daughter Savannah Praises His Partner Brittney for Keeping His ‘Dreams’ Alive After Death

December 9, 2025
Facebook X (Twitter) Pinterest WhatsApp TikTok Instagram
© 2025 USA Times. All Rights Reserved.
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms
  • Advertise
  • Contact

Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.