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Evolution of continents Most figures and tables contained here are from course text: Understanding Earth Fourth Edition by Frank Press, Raymond Siever, John Grotzinger, and Thomas H. Jordan Continents are believed to have been built from the middle out by plate tectonic processes. The earliest Earth did not likely have continental crust or modern plate tectonics. The Earth was hotter due to higher levels of radiogenic material, recent meteorite bomba rdment, latent heat of formation and segregation of the core. The early Archean crust was rich in Komatiit e which is an ultrama fic rock res embling the mantle (richer in Mg) than modern basaltic oceanic crust Sialic crustal material has been dated to be as old as 4.0 billion years (the Acasta gneiss in the Archean Slave province of Canada). 1 The Archean cra ton of continents are composed of high-grade meta morphic terrains (granulite, meta morphosed from sialic crust) separated by greenstone belts (Granitegreenstone terrains) which are massive granite intrusions surrounding meta morphosed mafic rocks believed to be fragments of oceanic crust from back a rc spreading center. 2 The craton beneath continents appear to have a Keel (stable mantle that does not subduct and stays with that piece of crust). The Archean c ratons of the world have been stable for 2.5 billion years and have been involved in several collisions and super continents but they seldom break up. This implies stability well beyond continental depths. Seismic evidence indicate the mantle is cold beneath continents (to depths of more than 200 km) compared to that beneath oceans (and tectonically active continental margins). A cold mantle would be more dense and should subduct but the continental keels do not. SO they must contain lighter minerals (depleted in the iron). Mantle Xenoliths (rock dragged along in volcanic magma) from Ki mberlit e pipes (volcanic pipes brought up from more the 150 km depth as evidenced by the presence of diamonds) indicate a peridotite from sub-cratonic mantle is depleted in iron and garnet (a heavy mineral ). Accre tion in the process of adding new material to the ma rgins of continents through tectonic activity. 3 4 The Wilson cycle is a describes the process by which continents break apart and come back together repeated through geologic time. The Atlantic sea board of North Ame rica has been closed through at least three super continent cycles and is a classic Wilson cycle ma rgin. Vertic al motion can also provide locations for sedimentary basins and later uplift. The following show vertical motion of continents due to: a) Glaciation b) Mantle heating c) Mantle cooling d) Cooling after rifted margins e) Deep mantle heating 5 6 7 8 9 10