Want to read Slashdot from your mobile device? Point it at m.slashdot.org and keep reading!

 



Forgot your password?
typodupeerror
×
Science

Rivers Ran with Gold... 3 Billion Years Ago 16

An anonymous reader writes "If you're looking to strike it rich, then perhaps this article in Nature magazine will be of assistance. It seems that three billion years ago there was no life on land and no oxygen in the atmosphere. But the rivers ran with gold."
This discussion has been archived. No new comments can be posted.

Rivers Ran with Gold... 3 Billion Years Ago

Comments Filter:
  • Now if I can just find that Slashdot article on how to build a time machine, I'll come back and have so much money I'll make Bill Gates envious!!!
  • Also (Score:2, Funny)

    by thewheeze ( 466050 )
    Trees were ripe with platinum, and grass was full of silver.

    Yeah....right...
  • Everyone was on the CEO pay scale too, right?

    hahahahah

  • Meteorite? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by AJWM ( 19027 ) on Wednesday September 18, 2002 @01:07AM (#4279314) Homepage
    a meteorite struck the basin about 2 billion years ago.

    And they don't seem to think this might have had something to do with it too? The Sudbury Basin around Sudbury, Ontario was formed by meteor impact (about 1.85 billion years ago), and is one of the world's largest sources of nickel and other metals like copper, silver, platinum group and gold. Coincidence? What other metals are found at the South Africa site?
  • you think deposits are formed by rain? lol

  • "Rivers ran with gold three billion years ago"

    Nature magazine has decided to trash its formerly good reputation by giving a sensational title to a mildly interesting article.
  • Abe [snpp.com] : Hah! The way people act around here, you'd think the streets were paved with gold.
    Jasper: They are.

    As if to prove Jasper's point, a car tries unsuccessfully to brake, but the shiny street surface is too slippery.
  • The reducing atmosphere theory was
    refuted decades ago. Well, it just goes to show
    you that it takes more than good science to
    drive out bad: It takes a whole lot of active
    scientific education of the public as well.
    I do think that science journalism does more
    harm to public understanding than good -- and
    this article is an example of why. It's main
    topical content is fairly well researched, and
    appears accurate to me as a non-specialist, but
    it's very subtitle loudly proclaims a known
    falsehood, in sensationalistic terms which will
    do more to delude the casual reader than the
    content will ever do to educate her.

    Bummer deal.
    • by fluffy666 ( 582573 ) on Wednesday September 18, 2002 @05:20AM (#4280057)
      Given that many deposits of Archean age show evidence of being deposited in a reducing environment - the oxidation states of iron, for example.

      http://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2001ESP/finalprogram/s es sion_182.htm

      *how* reducing, and for how long, is another matter. This is called 'an area of scientific research'.
      • And at the same conference, you will find overwhelming evidence of oxygenated oceans 4 billion years ago.

        http://gsa.confex.com/gsa/2001ESP/finalprogram/a bs tract_7459.htm

        Hint: The oxygenation state of the atmosphere is
        much more closely linked to that of the oceans
        than that of rocks.
  • Reducing Atmosphere? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by blitz77 ( 518316 ) on Wednesday September 18, 2002 @05:55AM (#4280116)
    Most scientists nowadays agree that the atmosphere was not reducing. Take a read of the following: - For a long time it was thought that the early Earth had a reducing atmosphere. A reducing atmosphere contains reductants, or molecules saturated with hydrogen atoms, which are able to reduce other molecules. Many scientists believed that the atmosphere consisted of CH4, NH3, and H2. This is the mixture of gases Miller and Urey used in 1953 to mimic the conditions of the early earth. Their experiment showed that abiotic molecules could be used to create important biotic compounds thought to be necessary for the origin of life. from http://www.chem.duke.edu/~jds/cruise_chem/Exobiolo gy/PBearth.html [duke.edu]

HELP!!!! I'm being held prisoner in /usr/games/lib!

Working...