GEOLOGY ARTICLE
Scientists draw portrait of early earth usng tiny zircons
NASA News Release
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01.17.01--Scientists are drawing a portrait of how
Earth looked soon after it formed 4.56 billion years
ago, based on clues within the oldest mineral grains
ever found.
Tiny zircons (zirconium silicate crystals) found in
ancient stream deposits indicate that Earth developed
continents and water -- perhaps even oceans and
environments in which microbial life could emerge -- 4.3
billion to 4.4 billion years ago, remarkably soon after
our planet formed.
The findings by two research groups, one in Australia
and the other in the United States, suggest that
"liquid water stabilizes early on Earth-type
planets," said geologist Stephen Mojzsis, a member
of the NASA Astrobiology Institute's University of
Colorado, Boulder, team. "This increases the
likelihood of finding life elsewhere in the
universe" because conditions conducive to life can
evidently develop faster and more easily than once
thought.
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It also "gives us a new view of the early Earth, where
the Earth cooled quickly" after gas and dust in the
newborn solar system congealed to form planets, said geologist
William Peck, of Colgate University in Hamilton, New York.
"There were continents and water really early -- and
maybe oceans and life -- all to be obliterated later by
meteorites, with almost no record left except these
zircons."
Until roughly 3.9 billion years ago, swarms of comets and
meteorites whacked the young Earth often enough to
occasionally vaporize the surface zones of the oceans and
erase any life residing there. The earliest known evidence of
microbial life on Earth comes from carbon isotope patterns
investigated by Mojzsis and colleagues in
3.85-billion-year-old Greenland sediments.
Now, the zircons from Western Australia demonstrate that
continents and water existed 4.3 billion to 4.4 billion years
ago. "Life could have had the opportunity to start 400
million years earlier than previously documented,"
Mojzsis said.
"Life could have arisen many times, only to be smashed,
and it only gets a hold once the meteorites taper off,"
Peck added. Mojzsis and Peck belong to separate research
teams, one that found a 4.4-billion-year-old zircon in 1999
and another team that unearthed a pair of 4.3-billion-year-old
zircons last year from the same area of Western Australia's
Jack Hills rock formation. Both groups published their studies
in the Jan. 11, 2001, issue of the British journal Nature.
The 4.4-billion-year-old zircon is "our earliest record
of the earliest crust" on Earth, Peck said. That zircon
and the slightly younger zircon grains measure roughly 250
microns wide -- less than one one-hundredth of an inch.
"These zircons have really been through the
wringer," said Peck.
Their history began sometime after Earth formed, when
"liquid water interacted with rocks," he said. That
interaction can happen in one of three ways: when water
exchanges with minerals in rocks, when crystals grow out of
solution in ground water, or when mineral veins are deposited.
Exposure to water increased the rocks' normally low ratio of
the uncommon isotope oxygen-18 to the more-common isotope
oxygen-16, he said.
Later, the rocks were melted underground -- or perhaps during
a meteorite bombardment -- and the zircons formed as crystals
within molten granite that was cooling to form solid rock. The
zircon-laden granite eventually was thrust upward to form
mountains, which later eroded. The granite vanished, but the
zircons ultimately came to rest 3 billion years ago in sandy
Australian stream sediments. These sediments later hardened
into rocks that subsequently were altered by heat and
pressure.
Both research teams used instruments called ion microprobes to
date and analyze the zircon crystals, which often contain
uranium, rare earth elements and other impurities. Uranium
decays to lead at a known rate. Uranium-lead ratios in the
zircons showed they formed as early as 4.4 billion to 4.3
billion years ago when they crystallized in molten granite.
Continental crust is different than crust that underlies the
oceans. Granite is a common rock in continents. And zircons
commonly crystallize in granite. So the zircons indicate
granite was present 4.3 billion to 4.4 billion years ago,
while the granite means continents existed at that time. Such
old granitic rock has not been found; it all has subsequently
been eroded away or otherwise recycled. The ancient zircons
are surviving vestiges of crustal granite from Earth's early
years.
"The fact you have a 4.4-billion-year-old zircon from
granite suggests there had to be the rock of the continental
crust," said geologist Sam Bowring of the Massachusetts
Institute of Technology. Ion microprobe analysis of rare-earth
elements within the zircon crystals also found levels typical
of continental rocks, Peck said.
The presence of water on the young Earth was confirmed when
both groups analyzed the zircons for oxygen isotopes and found
the telltale signature of rocks that have been touched by
water: an elevated ratio of oxygen-18 to oxygen-16. As a
result, "we know there was liquid water at some point
before 4.4 billion years ago," Peck said. Liquid water
had to collect somewhere, raising the possibility of oceans,
he added. He said it also is likely oceans existed because
"to make continents, you need to have water."
Peck said that before there were oceans, giant plates of
Earth's crust already could have started moving and colliding
with each other, causing large blocks of rock to dive downward
in a process called subduction. Without oceans, that rock
could not have melted to form continental rock like granite,
he said. Once there were oceans, however, seawater would have
reacted with and hydrated lava erupting from undersea
volcanoes at the mid-ocean ridges. The lava would then have
cooled and formed new seafloor, which later subducted. The
water trapped in minerals within the sinking rock lowered its
melting point, triggering volcanic eruptions that probably
produced island chains made of granitic rocks. It is thought
that such "island arcs" ultimately clumped together
to form continents.
"Oceans, atmosphere and continents were in place by 4.3
billion years ago," said Mojzsis. According to Peck, the
first oceans might have formed from water brought to Earth by
comets or have been emitted during early volcanic eruptions
from what became mid-ocean ridges.
The zircons suggest that life could have existed on Earth 4.3
billion years ago, said Mojzsis, because three key factors
necessary for life to take hold were present: energy, organic
material (from incoming comets and atmospheric reactions) and
-- according to the zircons -- liquid water.
Credits: Discovery of the 4.4-billion-year-old zircon was
reported by Peck, Simon Wilde at the Curtin Institute of
Technology in Australia; John Valley at the University of
Wisconsin, Madison; and Colin Graham of the University of
Edinburgh in the United Kingdom. Wilde found the
4.4-billion-year-old grain in 1999 while dating zircons from a
rock collected in 1984, Peck said. Mojzsis and colleagues say
they found a pair of 4.3-billion-year-old zircons last year
from the same area of Western Australia's Jack Hills rock
formation. Mojzsis worked with geochemist Mark Harrison of the
University of California, Los Angeles, and Robert Pidgeon of
the Curtin Institute of Technology. This information was
issued as a NASA news release NASA on January 17, 2001.
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