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11/2/16 Differentiation 1: core formation OUTLINE Reading this week: White Ch 12 Today 1. Finish some slides 2. Layers 3. Core formation 1 11/2/16 Element Relationships: Earth and C1 Chondrites Most important siderophile and lithophile elements: BULK Earth has higher Fe/Si and Mg/Si than the chondrites (Sun) => if bulk earth ≈ CI chondrite: lower mantle / core must host Si, or we got < chondrite Volatiles Earth is variably depleted in volatile elements (e.g., K, Rb, Cs, etc.) relative to chondrites 2 11/2/16 Crust Depth (km) Upper Mantle Transition Zone • Earth is radially zoned, with layers of increasing density toward the center. • Crust and mantle ~1/2 radius • Outer and inner core other ~1/2 60 220 410 660 Lower Mantle ⇒ How do we know? 2898 Outer Core (liquid) 5145 Inner Core (solid) 6370 Density inferred from the seismological data Crust Velocity (km/sec) 0 5 10 Lithosphere Asthenosphere Think: higher density = faster 1000 Mantle S waves Mesosphere 2000 P waves 3000 Depth (km) Outer Core 4000 Liquid 5000 Inner Core S waves Solid 6000 3 11/2/16 Matching seismic velocities to high P-T experiments, starting with peridotite for mantle, Fe-alloy for core we get x-section How do we know where the phase changes happen? Major seismic discontinuities Note: „spinel“ and „perovskite“ are high P versions of olivine Seismic data suggests Fe alloy like Fe meteorites at high P: We think ≈85% Fe + ≈5% Ni Problem: density too high, need 10% „light element“ Primary contenders: O, S, Si, C, P, Mg and H No direct evidence, so this is modeling, experiments, meteorite analogs ⇒ Still hotly debated 4 11/2/16 Core formation in light of accretion 3 scenarios for accretion: ! homogeneous Earth accretes from materials of the same composition AFTER condensation, followed by differentiation ! heterogeneous Earth accretes DURING condensation, forming a differentiated planet as it grows ! intermediate between these two end-members Basic concept of core formation Both homogeneous and heterogeneous accretion models: core segregates by: 1) melting of accreted Fe. 2) molten Fe sinks as droplets to the Earth’s center (density) Details differ between models 5 11/2/16 Heterogeneous accretion Accretion during condensation requires very rapid build up of earth, ~10Ka from initiation of condensation • Early core = refractory early condensates (Ca, Al) time • Silicate and metal phases condense next, with heating molten Fe replaces refractory core Density control Temperature control GG325 L32, F2013 Heterogeneous accretion Pros: 1. Explains relative proportions of refractory, later elements of inner planets with decreasing nebular temperature outward 2. Some siderophile elements condense later and never equilibrate with molten iron, remain in the silicate mantle. Major problem: ultramafic phases have Fe, but Fe should have segregated to core while still hot: no Fe expected in lower mantle, but seismology: Fe/(Mg+Fe) ~0.1 6 11/2/16 Homogeneous accretion Condensation first, then Earth builds from cool materials and becomes hotter Aka: Earth accreted mostly homogeneously after condensation was complete Important aspects: a. Heat builds up as the planet accretes. b. Sometime afterwards, the core formed by Fe melting, accompanied by other chemical transformations (see next slide) entirely Temperature controlled As things heat up, you lose volatiles, moderately volatiles, etc GG325 L32, F2013 7 11/2/16 Homogeneous accretion 1) Accretion starts with oxidized materials (some volatiles around, like C1-C3 chondrites) 2) Presence of H2 reduces Fe to metal 3) Later, Earth heats up: 4) Then some Fe2+ incorporated in silicates (olivines, pyroxenes) Homogeneous accretion Heavy Fe sinks, light rock “floats”, but volatile loss not 100% ~10% of silicate earth retained volatiles during accretion, other 90% was degassed = primitive mantle 8 11/2/16 Homogeneous accretion Pros: 1. Allows volatiles in the core 2. Explains Fe in core + silicates 3. Provides heat source for early mantle melting/ formation of proto continents Cons: 1. Degassing of all but 10% of the volatile elements doesn’t work for all elements 2. Not all siderophile elements agree with this core formation model 3. Heat for melting Fe comes later: Is there enough heat to melt Fe? Core Formation Core formation = closely linked to accretion and requires: • Immiscible components (iron metal and silicate). • Macro-segregation of components: at least one of which was molten or mostly molten. • Substantial difference in density of components. • Gravitational settling Fe melt layer collects, sinks as diapir (or crack), provides additional gravitational heat for melting 9 11/2/16 Core Formation Recent model: early collisional heating => deep magma ocean (persisted?) Lower mantle not necessarily heated: can retain many siderophile elements as molten Fe sinks through from above Wood et al. (2006) When? Core Formation Timing 182Hf to 182W (T1/2 ~9 Ma = max ~50 Ma extinct) • Hf is one of the most refractory elements => Earth should be ~chondritic • Core formation: W into core, Hf into mantle/crust • If core formation happened AFTER 182Hf-182W was extinct, Earth should have chondritic W isotopes IT DOESN’T => Models suggest core within 10-30 Ma Yin et al., 2002 Chondrite 10 11/2/16 Compositional caveat Arguments like W=core, Hf=silicates requires knowledge of core composition – so what’s in the core? • Iron meteorites = 5-10% Ni. Great: Chondrite – 6% Ni (to core) ≈ primitive mantle • Density arguments (seismology) require 10% of some light element(s) ⇒ What light elements are in the core? Light elements in the core Contenders: O, S, Si, C, P, Mg and H. Hotly debated, but many people like S, O: FeS is miscible with Fe liquid at low and high temperatures • S more depleted in silicate Earth than similar volatility elements • Iron meteorites contain FeS (troilite) FeO miscibility requires high pressures and temperatures Together with S affects how much sidero/chalcophile elements enter core: needed to explain mantle 11 11/2/16 What the chalcophile elements say Chalcophiles are depleted in the silicate Earth relative to chondrites, but not as depleted as many of the siderophiles are. ⇒ could argue against much S in the core (if there’s more S loving elements in the mantle than expected, S probably same) – ongoing problem What the siderophile elements say Siderophiles not as low in the mantle as expected from pure metal-silicate equilibration. • 5-350 times more enriched than expected for complete silicate-Fe equilibrium • Volatile siderophiles even more enriched than non-volatile ones. ⇒ 3 possible causes: 1) incomplete equilibration 2) an impure Fe phase 3) addition of a volatile rich component after core formation, aka “late veneer” 12