An isolated, iron-rich bay in the heart of East Africa is offering scientists a rare glimpse back into Earth’s primitive marine environment, and supports theories that tiny microbes created some of the world’s largest ore deposits billions of years ago.
According to University of British Columbia research published this week in Scientific Reports, 30 per cent of the microbes in the Democratic Republic of the Congo’s Kabuno Bay grow by a type of photosynthesis that oxidizes (rusts) iron rather than converting water into oxygen like plants and algae.


Tiny microbes like the ones in Kabuno Bay may have created some of the world’s largest ore deposits.








