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Abstract
The approximate age of Planet Earth is around 4.54
billion years. This age of the earth has been determined from isotopic dating
of the rock samples from the earth’s crust as well as from the soils and
rocks of the moon and meteorites. Dating methods e.g., Rubidium (87R)
– Strontium (87Sr) and Uranium (238U, 235U, 232U)
– Lead (206Pb, 207Pb, 208Pb) are widely used
for dating of the rocks pertaining to deep time.
Succeeding
the birth of planet earth, the origin of first life on the earth is one of
the greatest enigmas. There have been a number of questions that have been
asked on this issue but many of the answers are not satisfactory and
absolutely verified as well as full proof. For a better understanding of this
enigma, we need to focus on the several features and geochemical conditions
that were congenial for the first life on Planet Earth. We need to know which
were the main driving forces viz., water, chemistry, temperature cycles,
etc., that facilitated the emergence of life on the earth. There are various
opinions regarding the origin of first life on the earth. A group of
scientists believe that RNA or RNA -like molecule first appeared on the earth
that was capable to self replicate. As far as the existing knowledge is
concerned, the earliest life forms were microscopic organisms (microbes) and
their evidence is archived in the rocks of about 3.7 billion years ago.
Evidence of microbes is also preserved in Stromatolites (lamination of
lime-secreting Cyanobacteria that make calcareous mound). After the evolution
of Cyanobacteria, there was a dramatic transformation by the rise in Oxygen
level in the atmosphere. Gradually from the prokaryotes, the eukaryotes
evolved. In the history of life on the earth there have been numerous mass
extinction events when high proportions of the plants and animals became
extinct both in the terrestrial and marine realms. However, the classical
mass extinction events are popularly known as 'Big Five'. In accordance with
the geological time scale, the 'Big Five' major mass extinction events are:
Ordovician-Silurian (440-450 million years ago), Devonian-Carboniferous
(360-375 million years ago), Permian-Triassic (252 million years ago),
Triassic-Jurassic (205 million years ago) and Cretaceous-Tertiary (65 million
years ago). Extreme climatic and catastrophic events were responsible for all
these mass extinction events that took place in the history of earth.
However, with every mass extinction event, radiation of flora and fauna took
place and evolution as well as diversification in the plant and animal
kingdom was witnessed both on the land and in the ocean. All these are linked
to the change in climate and environment and there have been change in
climate since the first life emerged on the earth i.e., during the past
several million years. During the past few decades, the global trend of
climate change has created tremendous encouragement and increased concern
amongst the scientific community of the world and that have motivated the
scientists to focus on different aspects of climate research. In this
backdrop, the study of the past climate can provide some important clues and
by virtue of that possible changes in the future climate can be predicted.
Based on different instruments recorded at the meteorological stations,
climate and environmental records of the past few centuries can be traced but
not on a millennial and centennial scale. For this reason, we need proxies
viz., biotic proxies preserved as fossils and geochemical proxies archived in
the ancient rocks of the earth. These proxies are able to interpret the past
changes in the climate and environment that occurred in different time slices
on the Planet Earth.
During
the last thirty five years of my palaeobiological research hovered on the
past climate and evolution of organisms both on the land and oceanic realms
myself along with colleagues and research students associated with me have
contributed on various extreme climatic events of the past. We have been able
to decipher when and how the change in floral composition and radiation took
place after the Permian-Triassic mass extinction (~252 million years ago)
event (Pal et al., 1991; Pal and Ghosh, 1997; Chatterjee et al.,
2014; Ghosh et al., 2014; Ghosh et al., 2016; Kar and Ghosh,
2018; Ghosh et al., 2021). My working group also attempted to identify
the changes in the benthic marine flora before and after the Cretaceous-
Tertiary mass extinction (~65 million years ago) event (Ghosh et al.,
1997; Ghosh and Sarkar, 2013). During the last couple of decades, research of
my working group mainly focused on the phytoplankton from the sedimentary
rocks exposed in different islands of Andaman and Nicobar along with adjacent
offshore sedimentary cores. Our investigations revealed the optimum climatic
events, intensification of the Indian Summer Monsoon (ISM), fluctuations in
sea level, and various other climatic events since ~16 million years ago
(Chakraborty and Ghosh, 2016; Chakraborty et al., 2019; Ghosh et al.,
2017; Chakraborty et al., 2021; Saxena et al., 2021;
Chakraborty and Ghosh, 2021; Chakraborty et al., 2021a and b; Roy et
al., 2022; Saxena et al., 2022). However, according to my
perspective, the contributions of mine along with my working group are meager
and in further intensive research is needed that can be used as an analogue
to predict the future climatic scenario.
Last
but not the least, I would like to express that I am associated with the Journal
of Environmental Biology for the last 10 years in different capacities. I
really appreciate the quality of publication in the journal, the process of
peer review and the accuracy that attracts the international audience.
Specifically, I must acknowledge the contribution of Dr. R.C. Dalela who
solely handled the journal and to date, the standard is maintained in an era
of competition when various predatory journals are mushrooming all over the
world. It is still unbelievable for me that the founder, Dr. R.C. Dalela is
no more with us. On December 12, 2022 he took his last breadth. I pay my
deepest regards and homage to Dr. Dalela. In fact, he invited me to write
this editorial note and I am really thankful to this great human being; a
very honest, humble, meticulous and pleasing personality. Whenever I met him,
I told him that during my graduation I took the help of the book written by
Dalela and Verma on Cell Biology. He is no more in this living world as it is
the law of our life, but I believe that his untiring effort, hard work,
blessings and best wishes will certainly improve the quality of the journal.
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