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Earth History GEOL 2110 Lecture 11 Origin and Early Evolution of the Earth Part 2: Differentiation of the Earth’s Spheres
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Major Concepts Early Earth became strongly heated by gravitational condensation, radioactive heating of short-lived isotopes, and impacting of asteroids; this resulted in the differentiation of the dense iron core and the light crust from the primordial mantle Partial melting of the earth’s ultramafic mantle created the chemically distinctive crust of mafic and felsic composition Outgassing of volatiles and photochemical dissociation during early crust formation created an early hydrosphere and atmosphere that quickly evolved to create the dominant chemistry we observe today The evolution of the biosphere has subsequently modified the atmosphere’s composition by enriching it in oxygen The chemical balance of the earth’s spheres have a great capacity to buffer pertubations to the system
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Compositional Layers Structural Layers MANTLE SiO 2 – 45% MgO – 37% FeO – 8% Al 2 O 3 – 4% CaO – 3% others – 3% CORE Fe – 86% S – 10% Ni – 4% OCEANIC CONTINENTAL OCEANIC CONTINENTAL CRUST CRUST SiO 2 47% 56% Al 2 O 3 16% 18% FeO 13% 9% MgO 10% 3% CaO 10% 4% Na 2 O 2% 5.5% K 2 O 0.7% 2.5% TiO 2 1.1% 1.3% P 2 O 5 0.2% 0.7% Layers of the Earth = chondritic meteorites ---Mohorovicic Discontinuity
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Igneous Mineralogy of the Earth’s Crust Ocean CrustMantleContinental Crust
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Oceanic Crust Distillation of the Mantle by Partial Melting Magmatism at Mid-Ocean Ridges Peridotite
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Oceanic Crust Distillation of the Mantle by Partial Melting Incongruent Melting – mineral phases don’t melt in equal proportions Normal Ocean Geotherm Upwelling Geotherm Pl Sp Gt Komatiite
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Oceanic Crust Distillation of the Mantle by Partial Melting Evidence in Solid Solution Minerals OCEANIC OCEANIC CRUSTMANTLE SiO 2 47% 45% Al 2 O 3 16% 4% FeO 13% 8% MgO 10% 37% CaO 8% 3% Na 2 O 2.5% 0.2% K 2 O 0.7% 0.1% TiO 2 1.1% 0.3 % P 2 O 5 0.2% 0.05% Ni200ppm 5000ppm Cr100ppm 7000ppm 94% 6% 76% 24% Na Fe Ca Mg Olivine/PyroxeneBasalt/ Gabbro
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Continental Crust Distillation of Ocean Crust by Partial Melting Evidence in Solid Solution Minerals OCEANIC CONTINENTAL OCEANIC CONTINENTAL CRUST CRUST SiO 2 47% 56% Al 2 O 3 16% 18% FeO 13% 9% MgO 10% 3% CaO 10% 4% Na 2 O 2% 5.5% K 2 O 0.7% 2.5% TiO 2 1.1% 1.3% P 2 O 5 0.2% 0.7%
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Present-day Formation of Crust A Double Distillation Process Melting the Mantle Makes Mafic Magma – ALWAYS Melting Crust Makes Intermediate to Felsic Magma
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Crust Formation in Early Earth Not likely that Plate Tectonics, as we know it today, existed in the early Earth (>3.0Ga). Ocean crust too thick and too hot (plastic) to behave rigidly. Probably overthickened in compression zones causing partial melting of basal zones
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Evidence of Early Continental Crust 4.3-4.4 Ga zircon grains found in Sedimentary Rocks in Western Australia Zircons are rare in mafic rocks but plentiful in granitic rocks
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Formation of the Hydrosphere and Atmosphere
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Evidence of Early Formation of the Hydrosphere Acta Gneiss of the Slave Province in northwestern Canada 4.03 Ga metamorphosed sedimentary rocks
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Origin of Seawater and the Atmosphere Volcanic Outgassing
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Photochemical Evolution of the Atmosphere Prior to development of the Ozone layer, ultaviolet radiation caused dissociation of water vapor to create oxygen: 2H 2 O + UV rad 2H 2 (lost) + O 2 Oxygen then transformed methane and ammonia to carbon dioxide and nitrogen gas CH 4 + 2O 2 CO 2 + 2H 2 O
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Biogentic Build-up of Oxygen in the Atmosphere Banded Iron-formation deposition Fixing biogenic oxygen in chemical sediments
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The Global Chemostat and Thermostat The Earth’s Capacity to Buffer
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Summary of Early Earth Events
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Next Lecture Theory of Plate Tectonics Part 1: Toward the Development of the Grand Paradigm By SARAH Quiz : Chapters 6 & 7
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