Privileged Planet: continent formation (Introduction)

by David Turell @, Saturday, August 20, 2022, 18:06 (616 days ago) @ David Turell

From large asteroids impacts on early Earth:

https://www.universetoday.com/157189/would-we-have-continents-without-asteroid-impacts/

"Early Earth was a wild and wooly place. In its first billion years, during a period called the Archean, our planet was still hot from its formation. Essentially, the surface was lava for millions of years. Asteroids bombarded the planet, and the place was still recovering from the impact that formed the Moon. Oceans were beginning to form as the surface solidified and water outgassed from the rock. The earliest atmosphere was actually rock vapor, followed quickly by the growth of a largely hot carbon dioxide and water vapor blanket. Earth was just starting land masses that later became continents. For decades, geologists have asked: what started continental formation?

***

"Billions of years ago, Earth, along with the other planets, was a target for incoming asteroids. The early solar system was crawling with these chunks of rock and ice. Earth itself came together as some of those objects accreted together to make a larger world. They brought substantial amounts of minerals and water to the infant planet. During Earth’s first billion years or so, the giant impacts continued through a time called the Late Heavy Bombardment. That period ended about 3.8 billion years ago, and coincides with the formation of some of the oldest remaining rocks on the planet. (my bold)

"However, a new study out of Curtin University in Australia offers one possible explanation: ancient impacts by giant asteroids. The evidence lies in zircon crystals found in one of the oldest pieces of ancient crust on Earth. They point directly to a violent period in Earth’s early history when giant meteorites crashed to the surface, planting the seeds (as it were) of the continents that grew from eruptions spurred by the impacts.

***

"The force of the collision affects both the atmosphere and the surface. The shock wave from the incoming impactor fractures and then melts the crust in a process called “shallow melting”. The illustration below shows that process. That creates crystals that are typical of impact melt. If there’s water nearby (as there almost certainly was on early Earth), then it would also play a role in crystal formation and altering rocks. Those processes are fairly typical of the aftermath of giant impacts during the first billion years of Earth’s history. If the impact is big enough, it could deliver enough punch to trigger mantle melting. The mantle is the layer just below Earth’s crust. In such an impact, lava would pour out through the fractured crust. Impacts also throw out spherules of melted material out to great distances across the surface.

***

"Given that much of Earth’s surface has changed since the Late Heavy Bombardment through erosion and inundation, the team had to look for really old rock samples dating back to that period. That’s why they went to the Pilbara Craton. It’s a pristine example of rock formed by geologic processes and shows evidence of impact-related structures and minerals created during collisions during the Late Heavy Bombardment. Those structures could well be part of the continent-forming process.

“'By examining tiny crystals of the mineral zircon in rocks from the Pilbara Craton in Western Australia, which represents Earth’s best-preserved remnant of ancient crust, we found evidence of these giant meteorite impacts,” Johnson said. “Studying the composition of oxygen isotopes in these zircon crystals revealed a ‘top-down’ process starting with the melting of rocks near the surface and progressing deeper, consistent with the geological effect of giant meteorite impacts.”

"This study of zircon crystals and other minerals is the first solid evidence pointing toward the impact-related evolution of Earth’s continents. The study of Pilbara Craton is just the first step in understanding the role of impacts in continental formation. “Data related to other areas of ancient continental crust on Earth appears to show patterns similar to those recognised in Western Australia,” said Johnson. “We would like to test our findings on these ancient rocks to see if, as we suspect, our model is more widely applicable.'”

Comment: In the evolution of the Earth continents had to appear to allow the evolution of land animals. Note my bold: during that wild period 3.8 billion years ago, life appeared!!! We should say we come from extremophiles


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