New observations from the Hubble ultra deep field suggest that the star
formation rate at z>7 drops off faster than previously thought. Using a newly
determined star formation rate for the normal mode of Population II/I stars
(PopII/I), including this new constraint, we compute the Thomson scattering
optical depth and find a result that is marginally consistent with WMAP5
results. We also reconsider the role of Population III stars (PopIII) in light
of cosmological and stellar evolution constraints. While this input may be
needed for reionization, we show that it is essential in order to account for
cosmic chemical evolution in the early Universe. We investigate the
consequences of PopIII stars on the local metallicity distribution function of
the Galactic halo (from the recent Hamburg/ESO survey of metal-poor stars) and
on the evolution of abundances with metallicity (based on the ESO large program
on very metal-poor stars), with special emphasis on carbon-enhanced metal-poor
stars. Our most important results show that the nucleosynthetic yields of
PopIII stars lead to abundance patterns in agreement with those observed in
extremely metal-poor stars. In this chemical approach to cosmic evolution,
PopIII stars prove to be a compulsory ingredient, and extremely metal-poor
stars are inevitably born at high redshift. (Abridged)Comment: 11 pages, 7 figures, MNRAS in pres