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1 Department of Geological Sciences and Environmental Studies, State University of New York, Binghamton, New York 139026000, USA
2 Department of Biology, West Chester University, West Chester, Pennsylvania 19383, USA
3 Consulting Geologist, 140 Hemley Road, Anthony, Texas 79821, USA
The purported oldest living organism, the spore-forming bacterium Virgibacillus sp. Permian strain 29-3, was recently cultured from a brine inclusion in halite of the 250 Ma Permian Salado Formation. However, the antiquity of Virgibacillus sp. 29-3 has been challenged; it has been argued that the halite crystal and the fluid inclusion from which the bacterial spores were extracted may be younger than the Permian Salado salts. Here we report that brine inclusions from the same layer of salt that housed Virgibacillus sp. 29-3 are composed of evaporated Late Permian seawater that was trapped in halite cement crystals precipitated syndepositionally from shallow groundwater brines at temperatures of 17 37 °C. These results support the 250 Ma age of the fluid inclusions, and by inference, the long-term survivability of microorganisms such as Virgibacillus sp. 29-3.
Key Words: ancient microorganisms evaporites fluid inclusions halite Permian
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