In a groundbreaking development at the intersection of palaeontology and molecular ecology, scientists have unveiled the potential of palaeometabolomics—a novel investigative approach that harnesses metabolites preserved within fossilized mammalian hard tissues—to reconstruct intricate biological and ecological narratives of ancient life. This frontier strategy leverages the chemical byproducts of metabolism known as metabolites, unlocking a molecular vista into the physiology, health, and environment of extinct organisms dating back millions of years.
The recent study, conducted by an international team and published in Nature, focuses on a remarkable assemblage of early Plio-Pleistocene fossils excavated from pivotal palaeoanthropological sites across eastern, central, and southern Africa. These include six specimens from the iconic Olduvai Gorge in Tanzania, the Chiwondo Beds in Malawi, and Makapansgat in South Africa. The selected fossilized hard tissues—primarily bones and teeth—serve as natural reservoirs that entomb metabolic signatures, offering a unique molecular archive rarely accessed in deep-time research.
The technical backbone of this work rests on discerning endogenous metabolites integral to the organism from exogenous compounds introduced via environmental or diagenetic processes. To validate biological origin, researchers contrasted metabolomic profiles from fossilized bones against those derived from contemporary palaeosols and bones subjected to owl digestion. Such controls are crucial to identify and exclude metabolites emanating from external biological activity or taphonomic alteration, thus preserving the fidelity of ecological inferences.
Particularly noteworthy is the detection of metabolites associated with collagen degradation caused by collagenase-producing bacteria—a hallmark indicator of diagenetic overprints that obscure original biochemical signals. This bacterial signature, however, exists alongside preserved peptides, including fragments of collagen itself, meticulously identified through complementary proteomic analyses. The interplay of these molecular findings delineates a nuanced diagenetic timeline while underscoring remarkable molecular resilience within mineralized matrices.
Delving deeper, the endogenous metabolites extracted unveil vital clues about biological functions intrinsic to these ancient mammals. Metabolomes encapsulate snapshots of physiological status that, when interpreted against modern biochemical frameworks, elucidate metabolic pathways and health-related conditions extant in ancestors. Simultaneously, exogenous metabolites act as molecular sentinels reflecting surrounding environmental parameters—soil chemistry, vegetation types, and hydrological conditions.
Most compellingly, this multidimensional metabolomic approach enabled reconstructing paleoclimatic conditions at Olduvai Gorge with unprecedented granularity. By analyzing metabolite assemblages correlating with annual rainfall patterns and temperature fluctuations, the study substantiates prior paleoecological models depicting Olduvai’s Bed I strata as freshwater woodlands juxtaposed with expansive grasslands. Similarly, metabolites indicate a transition to drier woodlands and marsh habitats during the later Upper Bed II period, thus adding temporal depth and molecular precision to established paleoenvironmental reconstructions.
Beyond regional climate, these findings suggest all sampled sites experienced intervals markedly wetter and warmer than contemporary conditions. This resonates with broader evidence from palaeosols and faunal assemblages yet enriches it with molecular data—effectively opening a novel timeline of ecological shifts inferred directly through biochemical residues.
Underlying this extraordinary preservation of palaeometabolomes is a theorized mechanism involving extravasated serum filtrate that initially permeates the developing mineral matrix of hard tissues. Researchers hypothesize these metabolites become entrapped within a nanoscopic pool of structurally bound water nestled inside minute tissue niches. This microenvironment provides chemical stability, safeguarding fragile molecules over palaeontological timescales against complete hydrolytic or oxidative degradation.
This insight advances fundamental understanding of biomolecular fossilization, suggesting that metabolites—and by extension, other biochemical markers—may survive in hard tissues far longer than previously assumed. The implications ripple across palaeobiology, offering a powerful toolset to interrogate molecular ecologies tied to extinct organisms with unparalleled specificity.
The integration of metabolomics into palaeontological inquiry represents a paradigm shift. Traditional fossil analyses rely heavily on morphological, isotopic, or bulk geochemical data, which often lack the resolution to capture dynamic biological or environmental subtleties. By contrast, palaeometabolomic profiles function as intimate molecular diaries, chronicling physiological states and environmental interactions amid deep time.
Future applications of this approach hold promise not only for reconstructing ecosystems of early human habitats but also for charting evolutionary adaptations, disease ecology, and even responses to climatic perturbations on ancient landscapes. As analytical technologies continue to evolve, the capacity to decode these molecular whispers trapped in fossils will only expand.
In sum, this pioneering work lays a robust foundation for molecular eco-dynamics in deep time, offering a compelling new lens to visualize how early mammals—and potentially hominins—navigated and adapted to their environments. The convergence of palaeobiology, geochemistry, and metabolomics heralds an exciting frontier in understanding life’s complex history etched at the molecular scale within fossilized remains.
Subject of Research: Reconstruction of ancient biological and ecological profiles using palaeometabolomic analysis of fossilized mammalian hard tissues from Plio-Pleistocene African sites.
Article Title: Palaeometabolomes yield biological and ecological profiles at early human sites.
Article References:
Bromage, T.G., Denys, C., De Jesus, C.L. et al. Palaeometabolomes yield biological and ecological profiles at early human sites. Nature (2025). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-09843-w
Image Credits: AI Generated
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41586-025-09843-w
Tags: ancient biological narrativesearly human life profilesendogenous versus exogenous metabolitesfossilized mammalian hard tissuesmetabolic signatures in fossilsmetabolites in extinct organismsmolecular ecology in palaeontologyOlduvai Gorge researchpalaeoanthropological sites AfricapalaeometabolomicsPlio-Pleistocene fossilsreconstructing ancient physiology



