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The Evolution of Earth’s Atmosphere and Surface James F. Kasting Department of Geosciences Penn State University Brief review of theories of early atmospheric composition 1. • • • Oparin (1924, 1938), Haldane (1929) Atmosphere was a strongly reduced mixture of CH4, NH3, H2, and H2O Good from an origin of life standpoint Belief in this model was greatly strengthened by the success of the Miller-Urey experiments (early 1950’s): spark discharge in such a mixture created many organic compounds, including amino acids Image from Wikkipedia Problems with the old model • The giant planets are not good analogs for the early terrestrial atmosphere, as Urey had argued • CH4 and (especially) NH3 can be photolyzed and converted into other gases • Modern (surface) volcanic gases are relatively oxidized, as nicely documented in books and papers by Dick Holland. The major constituents, in decreasing order of abundance, are H2O, CO2, CO, H2, and sometimes SO2 and H2S. Little or no CH4 is released from surface volcanoes. – And there is now good evidence that the redox state of the upper mantle has not changed with time Brief review of theories of early atmospheric composition 2. • • • Rubey (1955), Walker (1977), Kasting (1993) The atmosphere was a weakly reduced mixture of N2, CO2, and smaller amounts of H2 and CO The H2 concentration was determined by the balance between outgassing from volcanoes and escape to space Hydrogen was assumed to escape at the diffusionlimited rate J. F. Kasting, Science (1993) Diffusion-limited escape • Hydrogen escape can be limited either at the homopause (~100 km altitude) or at the exobase (~500 km altitude) • On Earth today, H escape is limited by diffusion through the homopause • This may not be true, however, in hydrogenrich primitive atmospheres Homopause Exobase 100 km 500 km • If hydrogen escape was limited by energy rather than by diffusion, then the escape rate could have been 10-100 times slower than the maximum rate • This could have helped the atmosphere remain highly reduced for a long time • But, the problem is complex because the young Sun should have been much more active, leading to greater upper atmosphere heating Hydrogen escape rate (cm-2s-1) Slow hydrodynamic escape? Homopause hydrogen mixing ratio F. Tian et al., Science (2005) Solar EUV flux vs. time Studies of nearby young solartype stars give estimates for the time history of shortwavelength solar emissions (CoRoT press release drawing of young solar-analog star) • Young stars rotate faster, are more magnetically active, and hence have greatly enhanced EUV and XUV I. Ribas et al., Ap. J. (2005) emissions Estimated exospheric temperatures on the early Earth • Helmut Lammer’s group has worked on this problem. They calculate high exospheric temperatures on the early Earth (Kulikov et al., Space Sci. Rev., 2006) – Solar XUV flux was 100 times greater at 4.5 Ga, 10 times greater at 3.8 Ga – Based on observations of young, solar-type stars – Earth’s atmosphere would be swept away by the solar wind if not for the presence of a magnetic field – But, these atmospheres were hydrostatic… Bauer and Lammer, Planetary Aeronomy (2004) Earth’s present thermosphere at different XUV fluxes: hydrodynamic model • Work in progress with Feng Tian • Physics packages from the NCAR TIEGCM • Atmosphere is dynamic, so as it expands into space, it cools adiabatically • Still needs work to accurately model H2-rich atmospheres --Enhanced solar EUV flux --Present Earth atmosphere composition F. Tian et al., JGR Planets (2008) EUV An aside: Thermal escape of heavy gases (C and O) from early Mars • High solar EUV flux from the young Sun, combined with low gravity, leads to fast thermal escape of C and O • If most CO2 is lost by photodissociation and escape, as opposed to formation of carbonates, then the atmosphere can become oxidized • Helps explain early Mars’ climate --NO2 and O3 provide additional warming (by lowering the albedo) • Could provide another “false positive” for life Back to Earth… • Impacts may also have helped shape the early environment Artist’s rendition of the K-T impact (http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/ File:KT-impact.gif) The late heavy bombardment • The Moon, Mars, and Mercury are all covered with impact craters • These impacts must have postdated the oldest Moon rock, which has an age of ~4.44 Ga • Many of the Apollo moon rocks have ages of 3.8-3.9 Ga 1200 km Mare Imbrium Mare Orientale • Located just over the western limb (on the lunar farside) • Crater is 930 km in diameter • Requires a 100-km diameter impactor • The Earth must have been getting hit with objects at least this big Photograph from NASA Lunar Orbiter 4 (1967) $64,000 question: • Was there a “pulse” of bombardment at ~3.9 Ga, or was there a 700-m.y. exponential tail to accretion? Probable answer: Yes, i.e., both of these are true The Nice model • A new theory of outer Solar System evolution can explain the clustering of lunar age dates near 3.9 Ga • Current orbital periods: Jupiter – 11.8 yrs Saturn – 29.4 yrs • In the Nice model, Saturn starts closer in, and its orbital period is less than twice that of Jupiter http://images.spaceref.com/news/2006/ 1196_web.l.jpg Orbital evolution of the giant planets Neptune Uranus Saturn Jupiter Tsiganis et al., Nature, 2005, Fig. 1 • Simulated evolution of outer planets interacting with a ‘hot’ disk of planetesimals • Uranus and Neptune flip positions as Jupiter and Saturn pass through the 2:1 mean motion resonance! Implications of the Nice model • Asteroids would be continually kicked into new orbits (some of them Earth-crossing) as Jupiter’s mean motion resonances swept through the asteroid belt – Helps to explain asteroid belt clearing – This would give rise to more-or-less continuous bombardment in the inner Solar System • Comets would be strongly perturbed when Uranus and Neptune make their move – This may have created a pulse of impacts near 3.8-3.9 Ga • Impacts involving both types of objects would have influenced atmospheric composition (creating CO and CH4) and may have frustrated the early origin of life What was Earth’s surface like prior to 4.0 Ga? – Atmosphere was probably weakly reduced, assuming that the impact flux was not too large – No evidence for atmospheric O2 until about 2.4 Ga (despite continued claims to the contrary) – Climate is a big question: Was it hot, or were temperatures relatively cool? – Information about early climates can, in principle be derived from O isotopes in various types of sedimentary rocks O isotopes—the last 900 k.y. • O isotopes are measured in carbonate minerals in deep sea drill cores • Low 18O values correspond to warm temperatures after Bassinot et al. 1994 Marine carbonate 18O vs. time Time Cold Warm Shields & Veizer, G3, 2002 • On longer time scales, the O isotope composition of carbonates exhibits a steep trend • Taken at face value, a decrease of 10‰ in 18O of carbonates corresponds to a temperature increase of ~54oC, putting the Archean Earth at roughly 70oC! 18O of modern and ancient cherts (SiO2) (SMOW) Time Cold Warm • Cherts, which are better preserved, tend to show the same trend, i.e., they become increasingly depleted in 18O as they get older P. Knauth, Paleo3 219, 53 (2005) Chert data: • Mean surface temperature was 7015oC at 3.3 Ga – Ref.: Knauth and Lowe, GSA Bull., 2003 Carbonate data: • Surface temperatures remain significantly elevated until as recently as the early Devonian (~400 Ma) • These arguments have been supported by evidence from silicon isotopes (Robert & Chaussidon, Nature, 2006) and from molecular biology (Gaucher et al., Nature, 2008) • I don’t believe this, however, because there were glaciations at ~2.4 Ga and 2.9 Ga Geologic time First shelly fossils (Cambrian explosion) Snowball Earth ice ages Warm Loss of methane greenhouse Rise of atmospheric O2 (Ice age) Ice age Warm (?) Origin of life The faint young Sun problem • Furthermore, the Sun was less bright back at that time, making it even more difficult to make the early Earth hot Kasting et al., Scientific American (1988) CH4/CO2/C2H6 greenhouse with haze Late Archean Earth? Paleosols Water freezes • One can compensate for low solar luminosity by having higher concentrations of greenhouse gases, specifically, CO2 and CH4 • Warming by CH4 is limited, however, by the formation of organic haze • Hence, one needs very high CO2 in order to make the early Earth hot J. Haqq-Misra et al., Astrobiology (2008) Surface temperature vs. pCO2 and fCH4 3.3 Ga S/So = 0.77 • Getting surface temperatures of ~70oC at 3.3 Ga would require of the order of 3 bars of CO2 (10,000 times present) • pH of rainwater would drop from 5.7 to ~3.7 • Would this be consistent with evidence of paleoweathering? Probably not… Kasting and Howard, Phil. Trans. Roy. Soc. B (2006) Possible explanations for the O (and Si) isotope data • The oxygen isotope composition of seawater may have changed with time – Kasting et al., EPSL, 2006 • The cherts may have been formed by mixing of warm, hydrothermal fluids with cold seawater on the ocean floor – Hofmann et al., Precambrian Res., 2005; van den Boorn et al., Geology, 2007 • Seawater isotopic composition is thought to be controlled by waterrock interactions within the midocean ridge hydrothermal circulation systems (Muehlenbachs and Clayton, 1976) Conclusions • The Earth’s atmosphere prior to 4.0 Ga was probably weakly reduced (mostly CO2 + N2). Some CH4, however, was almost certainly present, especially after the origin of life – O2 was not present until about 2.4 Ga • The early surface environment of the Earth, along with climate and atmospheric composition, depends critically on the impact history of the early Solar System – The Nice model suggests that the heavy bombardment included a pulse at 3.8-3.9 Ga, along with an extended tail to accretion – Going back to the Moon with people may allow us to determine if this is really true • Despite the apparent congruity between isotopic and biological data that support the hot early Earth hypothesis, it seems unlikely that this was actually the case