Before the Huronian Ice Age, most organisms were
anaerobic, relying on
chemosynthesis and
retinal-based
anoxygenic photosynthesis for production of
biological energy and
biocompounds. But around this time,
cyanobacteria evolved
porphyrin-based
oxygenic photosynthesis, which produced
dioxygen as a waste product. At first, most of this oxygen was dissolved in the ocean and afterwards absorbed through the
reduction by surface
ferrous compounds,
atmospheric methane and
hydrogen sulfide. However, as the cyanobacterial photosynthesis continued, the cumulative oxygen oversaturated the reductive reservoir of the Earth's surface and spilled out as free oxygen that "polluted" the atmosphere, leading to a permanent change to the
atmospheric chemistry known as the
Great Oxygenation Event. The once-
reducing atmosphere, now an oxidizing one, was highly reactive and toxic to the anaerobic
biosphere. Furthermore, atmospheric methane was depleted by oxygen and reduced to
trace gas levels, and replaced by much less powerful
greenhouse gases such as
carbon dioxide and
water vapor, the latter of which was also readily precipitated out of the air at low temperatures. Earth's surface temperature dropped significantly, partly because of the reduced
greenhouse effect and partly because
solar luminosity and/or
geothermal activities were also lower at that time, leading to an
icehouse Earth. After the combined impact of oxidization and
climate change devastated the anaerobic biosphere (then likely dominated by
archaeal
microbial mats),
aerobic organisms capable of
oxygen respiration were able to proliferate rapidly and exploit the
ecological niches vacated by anaerobes in most environments. The surviving anaerobe colonies were forced to adapt a
symbiotic living among aerobes, with the anaerobes contributing the organic materials that aerobes needed, and the aerobes consuming and "detoxing" the surrounding of oxygen molecules lethal to the anaerobes. This might have also caused some anaerobic archaea to begin
invaginating their
cell membranes into
endomembranes in order to shield and protect the
cytoplasmic
nucleic acids, allowing
endosymbiosis with aerobic
eubacteria (which eventually became
ATP-producing
mitochondria), and this
symbiogenesis contributed to the evolution of
eukaryotic organisms during the
Proterozoic. == See also ==