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Precambrian Earth History Summary I. Introduction Precambrian makes up over 88% of all geologic time. Ranges from 4.6 billion -545 million years ago. Difficult to interpret because of: •Complex deformation of rocks •Intense metamorphism •Rocks deeply buried •A lack of fossils Precambrian is divided into three parts: •Hadean (Pre-Archean) •Archean •Proterozoic Paleozoic Era Mesozoic Era Cenozoic Era Precambrian Era 88% of all history The Precambrian divisions are defined broadly by atmospheric changes • Hadean: Lots of carbon dioxide, water vapor and methane • Archean: Water vapor forms oceans, oxygen starts to be made by photosynthetic organisms • Proterozoic: Significant oxygen in atmosphere, massive drop in carbon dioxide Some boundaries coincide with other events Present-day plate tectonics “begins” Period of heavy bombardment { Period of major accretion (~ 10-30 my) II. Hadean 4.5 to 3.8 billion years ago No rocks exist from the early Hadean, Except for meteorites. Earth and other planets would have been molten at the beginning of their histories. Solidification of the molten material into rocks happened as the Earth cooled. Once solid rocks formed Earth’s geological history began. III. Archean 3.8-2.5 billion years ago Crust began to form 3.96 billion years ago. Archean 1st true geological period: Abundant granites & gneiss’ 1st fossils (3.5 b.y.o) Large amount of radioactive material led to: •Volcanism yields1st atmosphere & seas Bacterial Micofossil •Subduction-Collisions of islands formed the 1st small continents •Metamorphism Archean age rocks are known as Greenstone belts. Greenstone belt IV. Archean Continental Crust 1st Continents and their characteristics begin to form during the Archean. Shield -Large region of exposed Precambrian rock. Platform - Precambrian rocks covered with younger rock. Craton - Shield and platform together form a continental core. Mobile Belt – Regions of deformation. Shield Craton Platform Archaen-Proterozoic transition To modern plate tectonics Present-day plate tectonics “begins” period of rapid crustal growth Period of heavy bombardment { 1. Early plates became bigger and thicker 2. Continued recycling of oceanic crust formed large amounts of buoyant continental crust • Continued partial melting/distillation • Separation of Si and other elements from Mg and Fe • Conversion of mafic material to felsic material through rock cycle 3. Decrease in heat production slowed mantle convection • Drove system to larger convection cells • Allowed larger plates to travel farther on the Earth’s surface and cool more • Led to subduction rather than collision of plates • Modern plate tectonics Period of major accretion (~ 10-30 my) V. Proterozoic 2.5 billion to 543 million years ago Proterozoic period differed because of cooler crustal conditions The cooler crust caused: •Erosion to form sedimentary rocks •Less tectonic activity and metamorphism. •Less extrusive ultramafic rocks. Sedimentary rocks and colliding islands accreted around stable cratons (Laurentia - ”North America”) Middle Early Archean Archean Rocks Rocks Late Precambrian Archean Rocks Proterozoic Rocks 3.3 4billion to billion 3.3tobillion to2.5 2.9 years billionago yearsago ago 42.9 billion to 540 million billion years years ago 2.5 billion to 540 million years ago VI. Crustal Evolution Proterozoic crustal evolution began 2 b.y.a (billion years ago). First evidence of a Wilson Cycle occurring. VI. Crustal Evolution The two most significant Proterozoic rock : 1. Ophiolites- large pieces of oceanic crust thrusted onto the continent. “Tiger-eye” 2. Banded Iron Formations (BIF’S)Thick sequences of iron oxide and quartz. O2 Si Fe O2 O2 O2 Fe Chert Layer Si Fe Fe Fe O2 Fe O2 Si Fe Si Fe Si Oceans were filled with Fe and Si ions from eroding continents Blue-green algae produce O2 which begins to oxidize the Fe Fe ions run out and the blue green algae create too much O2 and die off. Remaining O2 combines with the Si to form chert. Algae come back and produce more O2 and Iron again layer more hematite. This process repeats for 500 million years. Fe2O3 (hematite) SiO4 (chert) Fe2O3 (hematite) VII. Proterozoic Supercontinent Late Proterozoic: first supercontintent called Rodinia Rodinia : •Laurentia (N. America) •Australia •Antarctica •S. America IX. Atmosphere and Oceans Origins The differentiated core formed a magnetosphere allowing an atmosphere to develop. Water vapor from volcanoes formed the 1st seas as Earth’s temperature cooled. No free oxygen= No ozone (O3 ) layer. Proterozoic blue green algae begin producing O2. By the late Proterozoic O2 levels increased to 10%. X. Early Life No one knows for certain when life began. The first organisms probably microbes: •Single-celled •Anaerobic (required no O2 ) •Mostly heterotrophic (require external food sources) Prokaryotes - lack a cell nucleus and internal cell structures. Oldest fossil in the world are 3.5 b.y.o Cyanobacteria. Blue green algae is a photosynthetic bacteria and is considered to be one of the oldest life forms. X. Early Life Colonies of cyanobacteria form stromatolites. Stromatolites- Layers of cyanobacteria and sediment. reproduced asexually, so genetic diversity was low. X. Early Life Lack of organic diversity in the Precambrian is due to asexual reproduction of prokaryotes. 2.1 billion years ago more complex Eukaryotic cell design began. Eukaryotes - is an organism with a complex nucleic cell Reproduce sexually which allows genetic information to be exchanged. Sexual reproduction increased the rate of evolution dramatically.