How a single-celled organism almost wiped out life on Earth - Anusuya Willis
 There's an organism 
 that changed the world.
  It caused both the first mass extinction
 in Earth's history
  and also paved the way for complex life.
  How?
  By sending the first free oxygen
 molecules into our atmosphere,
  and they did all this
 as single-celled life forms.
  They're cyanobacteria,
  and the story of these simple organisms
  that don't even have nuclei 
 or any other organelles
  is a pivotal chapter 
 in the story of life on Earth.
  Earth's atmosphere wasn't always 
 the oxygen-rich mixture we breathe today.
  3.5 billion years ago, the atmosphere
 was mostly nitrogen,
  carbon dioxide,
  and methane.
  Almost all oxygen was locked up 
 in molecules like water,
  not floating around in the air.
  The oceans were populated by
 anaerobic microbes.
  Those are simple, unicellular life forms
 that thrive without oxygen
  and get energy by scavenging
 what molecules they find.
  But somewhere between 
 2.5 and 3.5 billion years ago,
  one of these microbial species,
  probably floating 
 on the surface of the ocean,
  evolved a new ability: photosynthesis.
  Structures in their cell membrane
 could harness the energy from sunlight
  to turn carbon dioxide and water
 into oxygen gas and sugars,
  which they could use for energy.
  Those organisms were the ancestors
 of what we now call cyanobacteria.
  Their bluish color comes from 
 the blue-green pigments
  that capture the sunlight they need.
  Photosynthesis gave those ancient bacteria
 a huge advantage over other species.
  They could now produce their own energy
  from an almost endless supply 
 of raw ingredients,
  so their populations exploded
  and they started polluting the atmosphere
 with a new waste product: oxygen.
  At first, the trickle of extra oxygen was
 soaked up by chemical reactions with iron
  or decomposing cells,
  but after a few hundred million years,
  the cyanobacteria were producing oxygen
 faster than it could be absorbed,
  and the gas started building up
 in the atmosphere.
  That was a big problem for the rest
 of Earth's inhabitants.
  Oxygen-rich air 
 was actually toxic to them.
  The result?
  About 2.5 billion years ago was a mass
 extinction of virtually all life on Earth,
  which barely spared the cyanobacteria.
  Geologists call this
 the Great Oxygenation Event,
  or even the Oxygen Catastrophe.
  That wasn't the only problem.
  Methane had been acting as a potent
 greenhouse gas that kept the Earth warm,
  but now, the extra oxygen reacted with
 methane to form carbon dioxide and water,
  which don't trap as much heat.
  The thinner atmospheric blanket
  caused Earth's first, 
 and possibly longest, ice age,
  the Huronian Glaciation.
  The planet was basically 
 one giant snowball
  for several hundred million years.
  Eventually, life adjusted.
  Aerobic organisms, 
 which can use oxygen for energy,
  started sopping up some of the excess
 gas in the atmosphere.
  The oxygen concentration rose and fell
  until eventually it reached 
 the approximate 21% we have today.
  And being able to use 
 the chemical energy in oxygen
  gave organisms the boost they needed
 to diversify
  and evolve more complex forms.
  Cyanobacteria had a part 
 to play in that story, too.
  Hundreds of millions of years ago,
  some other prehistoric microbe
 swallowed a cyanobacterium whole
  in a process called endosymbiosis.
  In doing so, that microbe acquired
 its own internal photosynthesis factory.
  This was the ancestor of plant cells.
  And cyanobacteria became chloroplasts,
  the organelles that carry out 
 photosynthesis today.
  Cyanobacteria are still around
 in almost every environment on Earth:
  oceans,
  fresh water,
  soil,
  antarctic rocks,
  sloth fur.
  They still pump oxygen
 into the atmosphere,
  and they also pull nitrogen out to
 fertilize the plants they helped create.
  We wouldn't recognize life on Earth
 without them.
  But also thanks to them,
  we almost didn't have 
 life on Earth at all.