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The Physics of Cold Water May Have Jump-Started Complex Life
When seawater gets cold, it gets viscous. This fact could explain how single-celled ocean creatures became multicellular when the planet was frozen during “Snowball Earth,” according to experiments.
If microscopic organisms struggled to get enough food to survive under these conditions, as Simpson’s modeling work has implied, they would be placed under pressure to change—perhaps by developing ways to hang on to each other, form larger groups, and move through the water with greater force. Over the course of a month, he and his graduate student Andrea Halling watched how a type of green algae—members of a lab-friendly species that swims with a tail-like flagellum—formed larger, more coordinated groups as they encountered thicker gel. In 1992, the geochemist Joseph Kirschvink had pointed out that there was good geological evidence for a global glaciation event in the ancient past; crucially, he provided a model for how all that ice might have been coerced to melt again.
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