Continent origin modelled
Australian researchers have come up with a new way to date the evolution of Earth and the formation of continents.
The research, published in Earth Science Reviews, studied Australia’s abundant lead-zinc ore deposits along with a vast global database to determine that 3.2 billion years ago was a critical point in the Earth’s history.
At this time, the models suggest Earth changed from a layer-cake structure to a mode of remixing, possibly driven by the start of global-scale plate tectonics, which still dominates the Earth system today.
One of the main questions the researchers aimed to answer was when the continents were first formed.
“To answer this question, we had to determine when the composition of the continental crust began to significantly differ from that of the Earth's mantle where the continental material was extracted from,” says Dr Luc Doucet from Curtin University's Earth Dynamics Research Group.
“The challenge was that we first need to understand how the Earth’s mantle evolved since the Giant Moon formation impact 4.5 billion years ago, when a giant asteroid collided with proto-Earth and modified Earth’s core and mantle. We need to reconcile this well-established theory with the composition of the present-day mantle.
“We used lead isotope compositions from rock samples across space and time, including primitive meteorites that were formed at the same time as the solar system and various components of the Earth's layers, to re-construct the Earth’s mantle evolution.”
Co-author Dr Denis Fougerouse, from Curtin's School of Earth and Planetary Sciences, said they could now compare the Earth’s mantle evolution with that of the continent by using measurements from large lead-zinc deposits, known for tracking continental crust composition through time.
“Australia has an estimated 52 billion tonnes of lead-zinc ore, making it the second-largest reserve in the world, just behind China. They range from as old as 3.4 billion years in Western Australia’s Pilbara region to relatively young deposits at 285 million years, making them perfect for our study,” Dr Fougerouse said.
Fellow co-author Dr Hugo Olierook, from Curtin's John de Laeter Centre, added that the team’s analysis revealed that lead-zinc deposits started to exhibit significant differences from the Earth’s mantle about 3.2 billion years ago.
“This period is considered to be the point at which plate tectonics began to be the dominant driver of continent formation on Earth. Earth is the only planet in our solar system that has plate tectonics and, perhaps not coincidentally, the only planet capable of hosting life,” Dr Olierook said.
A spin-off product of this ground-breaking research is that researchers will need to calibrate the radiometric ages they acquired for dating Earth evolution and mineralisation events in the future using the newly established uranium-lead isotopic system curves by the Curtin group.