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Transcript
Search for Life in the Universe
Chapter 4
Geological History of the Earth
(Part 1)
5/23/2017
AST 248, Fall 2005
1
Outline (1)
• Reading the Earth’s History
–
–
–
–
–
Rocks and Fossils
Sedimentary Strata & Relative Age
Geological Time Scale
Radiometric Dating: Absolute Age
How Far the Record?
• Formation of the Earth
–
–
–
–
Accretion
Differentiation
Formation of the Moon
Age of the Earth
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Outline (2)
• Hadean Earth
– Heavy Bombardment
– Outgassing
– Impact Sterilization
– Origin of the Continents
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Rocks and Fossils (1)
• Rock and fossil record:
– Need: human history too short, only one millionth of
the life of the Earth
– Rock record: structure & composition  climate
– Fossil record: environment at the time and evolution
• Rocks:
– Igneous: molten rock that cools and solidifies
– Sedimentary: gradual compression of sand and silt
– Metamorphic: rock changed by high pressure or
temperature without melting
– Rocks can change from one type to another
– Constituents: minerals
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Rocks and Fossils (2)
• Fossils:
– (Almost) only found in sedimentary rock
– Minerals replace organic material; rarely, some
organic material survives
– Coprolites: fossils of petrified excrement
– Stomach content: undigested food and/or gastroliths,
pebbles used for digestion
– Footprints: tell of mobility and structure, e.g.,
dinosaurs
– Only a small fraction of living organisms leave fossils
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Sedimentary Strata & Relative Age
• (Almost) only source of fossils
• Strata differentiation:
– Rate of accumulation
– Composition
– Grain size
• Chronological sequence:
– Strata laid on top of each other
– No single site contains all epochs
– Overlap of multiple sites  complete geological
sequence
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Geological Time Scale
• Initial qualitative division; radiometric dating came later
• Hadean (“hellish earth”) eon
– Hellish conditions in the young Earth (4.54.0 byr)
• Archaean (“ancient life”) eon
– Single-cell organisms: first fossil record (4.02.5 byr)
• Proterozoic (“earlier life”) eon
– Single-cell organisms: fossils visible under a microscope
(2.50.54 byr)
• Phanerozoic (“visible life”) eon
– Multi-cell organisms: fossils visible to the naked eye (0.540 byr)
– Many subdivisions based on fossil record
– Usually rapid transition in the sedimentary layers
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Radiometric Dating: Absolute Age
• Radioactive decay
– Elements have multiple isotopes (different # of neutrons for the
same # of protons)
– Some isotopes are unstable and decay:
• Alpha decay: emit a helium nucleus
• Beta decay: emit an electron
• Electron capture: absorb an electron
– Decay is probabilistic:
• Half life: characteristic lifetime
• Exponential decay
• Geologically useful: half-life thousands to billions of years
• Radioactive dating:
– Igneous (avoid metamorphic) rocks: determine last solidification
– Need to know initial composition, e.g., no inert argon
– Check for consistent dates from different isotopes
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How Far the Record?
•
•
•
•
Oldest dated rocks: 4.0 byr
Earlier rocks: no radiometric dating
Oldest fossils: 3.5 byr
Zircons (zirconium silicates, tiny grains
embedded in sedimentary rocks): 4.34.4
byr
• Oldest known life in a rock layer: 3.85 byr
• No good limit on when life started
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Accretion (1)
• Starting point: solar nebula, collapsing cloud of gas +
dust
 Protoplanetary disk: Sun, surrounded by disk of gas +
dust
 Condensing solid particles:
– Terrestrial distance: metals and rocks
– Jovian distance: also ices
 Accretion: solids merge, first randomly, then aided by
self-gravity
 Planetessimals: size ~ 110 km orbiting the Sun
 Protoplanets: size ~ few hundred km, colliding violently
 Moon/Mars-size objects: ~ 1000 km
 Terrestrial planets: ~10,000 km and well separated
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Accretion (2)
• Water: due to icy planetessimals in elliptic
orbit, originating from Jovian distances
• Giant (Jovian) planets: different
mechanism, preserving hydrogen and
methane
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Differentiation
• Differentiation: heavier material sinking toward the center
• Heat sources to melt the Earth:
– Kinetic energy of accreting planetessimals
– Friction during differentiation
– Radioactive decay, more earlier on, but continuing until now
• Resultant layers:
– Core: iron, nickel
• Solid at the center (because of high density)
• Molten on the outside
– Mantle: silicates
– Crust: lowest density
• Evidence for Earth’s structure:
– Average density
– Seismic waves
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Formation of the Moon
• Earth’s Moon:
– Unique among terrestrial planets
– Affects life:
• Tides
• Life cycles: e.g., menstruation
• Composition:
– Smaller proportion of volatiles: water, gold and lead
– Lower density, similar to that of mantle  lacks iron
• Impact theory:
– Moon formed by a Mars-sized object colliding with the Earth:
• Splash off mantle-like material
• Lose volatiles
– Simulations: support the hypothesis
– Evidence: only circumstantial
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Age of the Earth
•
•
•
•
Oldest rocks: 4.0 byr
Zircons: 4.34.4 byr
Moon rocks (Apollo): > 4.4 byr
Meteorites: 4.6 byr (small fraction a little
younger)
 Age of solar system: 4.55±0.02 byr
• Lead dating of Earth: Same age ±0.02 byr
• Differentiation (because lead sinks): within first
0.1 byr
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Heavy Bombardment
• Continued bombardment after terrestrial planets
were formed
• Solid surface  impact crater
• Earth: craters obliterated by erosion
• Moon:
– Rocky regions: older than 4 byr are densely covered
by craters
– Maria (huge craters later covered by lava): few
craters
– Radioactive dating: maria formed 3.03.9 byr ago
– More precise measurement: cratering dropped off 3.8
byr ago
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Outgassing (1)
• Source of gas:
– Little hydrogen or helium gas captured during formation (unlike
giant planets)
– Source of water: comets on elliptical orbits  CH4 and CO2
– Atmosphere: gases escape from molten rock, or through the
volcanic vents of the crust
– Oceans: water vapor condensing as rain
• When?:
– Isotopic ratios suggest major early release, before crust formed
– Zircons (4.34.4 byr ago): studies suggest oceans already
present (See Scientific American, Oct 2005)
 Suggests oceans present by the time Earth was 0.2 byr old
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Outgassing (2)
• What?:
– Outgassing today (volcanoes): H2O, CO2, N2,
H2S, SO2
– Early atmosphere: CO2 and no O2
– Today’s atmosphere: N2 (78%), O2 (21%), Ar
(1%); CO2 < 0.03%
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Impact Sterilization
• Oceans as early as 0.2 byr after formation
• Impact sterilization by large asteroids:
– 350400 km: raise temperature to 2,000 C
and vaporize oceans
– 150190 km: vaporize top few hundred
meters of the oceans
– Last sterilizing impact: 3.94.2 byr ago
– ~100 asteroids of these sizes still exist, but
orbits are stable and not earth-crossing
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Origin of the Continents
• Seafloor crust (and volcanoes):
– Basalt: high-density igneous rock
– 510 km thick
– Radiometric dating: < 0.2 byr old
• Continental crust:
–
–
–
–
Granite: lower-density igneous rock
2070 km thick
Radiometric dating: up to 4.0 byr old
Floats like an iceberg: higher and deeper
• Plate tectonics:
– Recycles seafloor crust
– Continually add to continental crust
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