These two ancient supermountains may be responsible for evolution of life on Earth

The evolution of life on Earth is one of science's greatest mysteries, but we may have moved another step forward in solving it, and two ancient supermountains might have played a critical role during two of life's most important biological inflection points.

In a new study published this month in the journal Earth and Planetary Science Letters, researchers from the Australian National University (ANU) make the case that the primordial Nuna and Transgondwana supermountains seeded essential mineral and atmospheric resources on the planet's surface that kick-started the development of eukaryotic cells and, later, the Cambrian explosion.

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