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Buck Reef Chert from HERE.
Abstract: Thin carbonaceous laminations preserved in shallow-water facies of the 3416 Million year old Buck Reef Chert, South Africa, have been interpreted to represent some of the oldest-known mats constructed by photosynthetic microbes.
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Authigenic uranium (Ua = U–Th/3) correlates inversely with siderite abundance, suggesting that variations in carbonate rather than oxygen activity controlled uranium mobility. The inferred lack of oxygen and ferric minerals and the presence of dissolved Fe2+ in the water column imply that H2O, Fe2+, and H2S could not have served as primary electron donors for carbon fixation. It is most likely that Buck Reef Chert bacteria utilized H2 as the primary reductant for photosynthesis.