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Even ancient sea creatures had a thing for bling

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Even ancient sea creatures had a thing for bling

And you thought only humans had a thing for bling. New research has found fossilised sea creatures that coated themselves in tiny diamonds created in the asteroid impact that killed off the dinosaurs.

London, May 9 : And you thought only humans had a thing for bling. New research has found fossilised sea creatures that coated themselves in tiny diamonds created in the asteroid impact that killed off the dinosaurs.

A team led by Michael Kaminski, a geologist at University College London made the discovery.

The research team went to the Umbria-Marche basin of eastern Italy in search of the fossilised remains of deep-ocean creatures called agglutinated foraminifera.

These amoeba-like single-celled organisms build protective "tests" around themselves by sticking together sediment grains from the sea floor.

Curiously, they seem to prefer heavy grains, presumably to help them sink to the bottom of the ocean.

The research team looked for fossils in rock samples taken just above and below the sediment layer created by the huge asteroid impact at the end of the Cretaceous period, 65 million years ago.

The foraminifera tests they found were mainly composed of common minerals such as quartz, but some of the component grains were unusually rich in metals such as nickel and cobalt, indicating that they had originated in outer space.

Even more surprising were microscopic granules of carbon, no more than 10 micrometres across, which were subsequently identified as diamonds.

"The foraminifera were deliberately using extraterrestrial diamonds in their shells," New Scientist quoted Kaminski, as saying.

The majority of these microdiamonds were formed from terrestrial graphite rock that was altered by the extreme pressure and temperature of the asteroid impact, but a small proportion was truly extraterrestrial, derived from carbon in the asteroid itself.

The study is published in the Proceedings of the Seventh International Workshop on Agglutinated Foraminifera.

ANI

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