HomeScienceEarth's oceans were once green not blue and they may change colour again — but when?

Earth's oceans were once green not blue and they may change colour again — but when?

There existed only single-celled creatures in the seas of Earth long before the plants and animals.

April 16, 2025 / 14:35 IST
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Earth’s Oceans Were Once Green, Say Japanese Scientists (Image: Canva)
Earth’s Oceans Were Once Green, Say Japanese Scientists (Image: Canva)

It’s hard to picture now, but Earth’s deep blue oceans were once green. According to a new study by Japanese researchers, early photosynthesis helped shift the colour of our seas. The discovery offers fresh insight into how simple life changed the planet over billions of years.

The Earth's Waters in the Green Age

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There existed only single-celled creatures in the seas of Earth long before the plants and animals. Due to their chemistry, the ancient seas looked green, not blue. The land was desolate, covered in black, brown, and grey rocks. Banded iron formations are characteristic patterns that occurred below the surface between 3.8 and 1.8 billion years ago. The shifting chemistry of Earth's atmosphere and seas was recorded by these strata.

When the world contained little or no oxygen during the Archean aeon, the transformation began. Early life forms utilised a type of photosynthesis that used iron instead of water. The "Great Oxidation Event"—a turning point that paved the way for the advent of more complex life—was the eventual product of this process. This shift from oxygen-rich to oxygen-poor conditions is evidenced by the red and grey layers found in ancient iron deposits.