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Published byRandell Pierce Modified over 9 years ago
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Formation of The Earth
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Composition of the Sun
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The Most Unusual Element Administratium (Ad) No protons: Atomic Number Zero One neutron 27 Assistant neutrons 137 Deputy assistant neutrons 332 Associate neutrons Detectable indirectly: slows down all reactions it participates in
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Composition of the Sun Abundance of Light Elements Rarity of Lithium, Beryllium, Boron Preference for Even Numbers Abundance peak at Iron, trailing off after
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How Elements Form in Stars Sun: 4 H He He + particle Mass 5 – Unstable He + He Mass 8 – Unstable He + He + He C Add more He to make heavier elements End of the line is iron for energy production Atoms beyond Iron made in massive stars
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What are Planets Made of? Same material as Sun Minus the elements that remain mostly in gases We find this pattern in a certain class of meteorites
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Chondrites
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Chondrite
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The Earth’s Crust looks Very Different
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Composition of the Crust
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Hot or Cold? Up to 1940: Earth is hot inside, so must have formed hot 1940-1970: Earth need not have formed hot 1970-Earth did form hot after all
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Hot Early Earth? Lord Kelvin, 1862: estimate age of Earth from cooling. – Earth’s heat is left over from its formation – Heat travels outward by conduction – Earth is not producing heat Only one problem (actually three): Every one of Kelvin’s assumptions was wrong
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Three Images of Early Earth
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Chesley Bonestell’s Classic Image
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Nuclear Processes Radioactivity (Becquerel, 1896) Importance for Earth history: – Used for dating rocks – Explains sun’s energy output – Earth does produce heat
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Maybe Earth Formed Cool? Planets formed by accretion of smaller bodies Each impact produces heat If rate is slow enough, heat can radiate away as fast as it is produced
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Earth Formed Hot After All Apollo samples: Moon had “magma ocean” Better understanding of impact physics Role of mega-impacts Formation of core
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Magma Ocean by Ron Hartmann
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Craters and Planetary History Superposition Crater Saturation Crater Degradation
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Superposition
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Crater Saturation
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Crater Degradation
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Biggest and Oldest Crater on the Moon
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Impact History Earliest records on Moon, Mars and Mercury: Intense Cratering As planets grow, their gravity increases. Impacts get more violent Debris from impacts buries hot rocks from earlier impacts Heat builds up Magma Ocean
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Basalt and Anorthosite
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How Do Planets Accrete? Tiny objects can be held together by welding, electrical forces, chemical interactions Big objects hang on to incoming material by gravity Things the size of a car are the mystery right now
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Computer Studies Start with as many orbiting objects as your computer can handle Let them collide Don’t get 8-10 nice, regular planets Get 100’s of Moon and Mars-sized objects These collide to make bigger planets Violent beyond your wildest dreams
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How Did the Moon Form? Co-Creation? Fission? Capture? 1985: Bill Kaufmann, Jay Melosh and others: Mega-Impact
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Mega-Impacts: As Usual, Gary Larson Gets There First
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Computer Simulations by H.J. Melosh (University of Arizona)
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Formation of the Moon
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View from the early Moon Earth would have been as hot as the Sun for 10,000 Years
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Earth’s Atmospheres and Oceans Primordial from accretion Magma Ocean Mega-Impacts (1000 km +) – Magma Ocean – Vaporized Rock (100’s years) – Steam Smaller Impacts (100 km +) – Vaporized Rock (Years) – Steam (Boil off Oceans)
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Earth Finally Settles Down Origin of Atmosphere and Oceans? – Outgassing? – Impacts of comets? Early Atmosphere Probably Mostly CO 2, and H 2 O
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Bonestell: The Earth Cools
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Bonestell: The Oceans Form
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Hartmann: The First Moonrise
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The Very Early Earth (Hadean) Intense cratering on Moon (and presumably Earth) ends about 4 billion years ago. Oldest earth material: 4 billion year old zircon from Australia. Oldest rocks: 3.9 billion years, NW Canada. Minnesota River Valley rocks: 3.1 billion years. Can’t say much about processes Liquid water from the git-go
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The Faint Early Sun Sun 4 billion years ago was only 70% as bright as now. Would make average temperature of earth -15 F (-26 C) But earth has always had liquid water Must have had denser atmosphere, greater greenhouse effect.
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The Archean 3.0 – 2.5 billion years ago About half of earth’s continental crust forms Granite, deep-water sediments and volcanic rocks, deep crustal rocks Were there mountains? Did Plate Tectonics exist?
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Molasse, Switzerland
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Molasse and the High Alps
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Archean Granite
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Archean Pillow Lava
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Archean Iron Formation
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3.1 Billion Year Old Gneiss
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Archean North America
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Bear and Nain Provinces
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Rae Block Collides
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Penokean About to Begin
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Penokean Orogeny and Churchill Collision
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Wyoming Province Collision
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Hearne Block Collides
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Trans-Hudson Orogeny
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Mazatzal Orogeny
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Yavapai Orogeny
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Midcontinent Rift Forms
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Grenville Orogeny Complete
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Present North America
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