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Earth

Earth’s oceans may have been green for billions of years

Some cyanobacteria have pigments that specialise in harvesting green light to power photosynthesis, which may be because they evolved at a time when the oceans were iron-rich and green-tinged

By James Woodford

18 February 2025

The sea around Iwo Island, one of the Satsunan Islands off the coast of Japan, is green because of high levels of iron

Taro Matsuo et al. (2025)

For a long stretch of Earth’s history, our planet might have looked green from a distance, instead of the pale blue dot we know today.

Earth’s green period, which lasted from around 3 billion years to 600 million years ago, probably shaped the evolution of the cyanobacteria that filled the atmosphere with breathable quantities of oxygen, says Taro Matsuo at Nagoya University in Japan.

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