A unique rock in the Appalachian Mountains holds evidence of microbial life that thrived over a billion years ago. Known as Franklin Marble, it formed from ancient seafloor sediments rich in bacteria and algae, later transformed by tectonic collisions and volcanic activity. Today, it offers a rare glimpse into Earth’s early biosphere and geologic history.
- ancient microbial mats
- ancient seafloor fossils
- Appalachian Mountains geology
- back-arc basin sedimentation
- billion-year-old rock
- early life on Earth
- Franklin Marble
- geological history of Appalachians
- Laurentia and Amazonia collision
- metamorphosed limestone
- microbial ecosystems in geology
- microbial life fossil record
- Pangea mountain building
- photosynthetic bacteria fossils
- Precambrian marine life
- Precambrian stromatolites
- Rodinia supercontinent formation
- scishow
- stromatolites fossil formation
- tectonic plate convergence history
- youtube
- zinc in Franklin Marble
