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Earth had purple plants before green ones

For a billion years, the planet probably looked like Mars in lavender.

By Smartasaurus
Earth had purple plants before green ones
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Before Earth was green, it may have been purple — and the plants we have today are the survivors that lost the first round.

The hypothesis, proposed by microbiologist Shiladitya DasSarma in 2007, starts with a pigment called retinal. Retinal is the same molecule your eye uses to detect light, and it absorbs the green wavelengths the Sun delivers most strongly. It is also simple, ancient, and far easier to evolve than chlorophyll. The earliest light-harvesting microbes, DasSarma argues, would have used it — and a microbe full of retinal looks purple.

For perhaps a billion years, purple haloarchaea may have dominated Earth's shallow seas and shorelines, soaking up the green light and reflecting back the red and blue. When chlorophyll-based life finally appeared, it had to make do with the wavelengths the purple microbes weren't using — which is exactly the spectrum chlorophyll absorbs, and exactly why plants reflect green today.

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Sources

  1. 1.The Purple Earth hypothesis (International Journal of Astrobiology)
  2. 2.Retinal-based phototrophy and early Earth (Scientific American)
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