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New Thermometer Reveals Wet Conditions on Earliest Earth
Researchers at Rensselaer and Australian National University
have found new evidence that environmental conditions on early
Earth, within 200 million years of solar system formation, were
characterized by liquid-water oceans and continental crust
similar to those of the present day. The researchers developed
a new thermometer that made the discovery possible.
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A single Hadean zircon shows ion-probe age
(1); crystallization temperatures (2); and internal
chemical structure (3).
Graphic: E. Bruce Watson |
"Our data support recent theories that Earth began a pattern
of crust formation, erosion, and sediment recycling as early in
its evolution as 4.35 billion years ago, which contrasts with
the hot, violent environment envisioned for our young planet by
most researchers and opens up the possibility that life got a
very early foothold," said E. Bruce Watson, Institute Professor
of Science and professor of geochemistry at Rensselaer.
According to Watson, the research provides important
information and a new technique for making additional
discoveries about the first eon of Earth's history, the Hadean
eon, a time period for which still little is known.
The research findings are reported in the May 6 issue of the
journal Science in a paper titled "Zircon Thermometer
Reveals Minimum Melting Conditions on Earliest Earth."
Watson collaborated with co-author T. Mark Harrison, director
of the Research School of Earth Sciences at Australian National
University and professor of geochemistry at UCLA, on the
research. The work was supported by the National Science
Foundation, the Australian Research Council, and the NASA
Astrobiology Institute.
Watson and Harrison developed a new thermometer that involves
the measurement of the titanium content of zircon crystals to
determine their crystallization temperature. Zircons are tiny
crystals embedded in rock that are the oldest known materials
on Earth. Zircons pre-date by 400 million years the oldest
known rocks on Earth. These ancient crystals provide
researchers with a window into the earliest history of the
Earth and have been used to date the assembly and movement of
continents and oceans.
"Zircons allow us to go further back in geologic time because
they survive processes that rocks do not," said Watson.
"Although they measure only a fraction of a millimeter in size,
zircons hold a wealth of information about the very earliest
history of Earth."
In Watson and Harrison's work, zircons from the Jack Hills
area of Western Australia ranging in age from 4.0 to 4.35
billion years were analyzed using the thermometer. The new
temperature data supports the existence of wet, minimum-melting
conditions within 200 million years of solar system formation,
according to the researchers. In the Science paper, the
researchers discuss how the thermometer provides clear
distinction between zircons crystallized in the mantle, in
granites, and during metamorphism, thereby providing consistent
information about the conditions on Earth during the crystals'
formation.
Watson teaches undergraduate and graduate geology courses at
Rensselaer, including Natural Sciences,
Introduction to Geochemistry, and Earth
Materials.
Full
text of paper (pdf)
Rensselaer Press Release
Published
May 9,
2005
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