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CRUSTAL EVOLUTION Thermal history of Earth Decay of U, Th, K isotopes: produce heat Heat loss on ocean ridges = twice heat produced Earth must have cooled since Archaean Komatites indicate Archaean was hotter Viscosity of mantle increased with time- slower convection First crust: mafic or felsic? low degrees of partial melting produce felsic magmas higher degrees of melting produces mafic magma Early mantle was hot- implies larger degrees of melting i.e. mafic Lunar anorthosite model: lunar magma ocean Plagioclase floated to form anorthosite; Ol, Pyx sank But in hydrous magmas (Earth) plagioclase sinks. Basalt model: Greenstone belts- basalt important Magma ocean- ol, pyx and plag crystaliize= basalt favored OLDEST ROCKS Oldest rocks: 4.0 Ga Acasta gneiss (NW Canada) Oldest mineal: U/Pb 4.3 Ga zircon in 3.2 Ga quartzites Acasta gneisses range from felsic to mafic- maybe chemically similar to greenstone belts. Greenland Archaean Itsaq gneisses: 3 terranes assembled by 2.7 Ga. 1) Akulleq terrane- mainly Amitsoq tonalite-granodiorite. Age3.9 – 3.8 Ga. Metamorphism at 3.6 Ga 2) Akia terrane- 3.2 to 3.0 Ga, Tonalite. Metamorphism at 3.6 Ga 3) Tasiusarsuaq terrane: 2.7 to 2.8 Ga. Late Archaean metamorphism Supracrustal rocks: basalts, komatities, BIF, volcanic turbidites Overall greenstone type tectonic seting by 3.9 Ga. No major continents in early Archaean- why not? 1) Fragments re-cycled into mantle (see Nd evidence) 2) Too few collisions Early crust Composition Origin Oceanic 4.5 Ga basalt mantle partial melt Continental <4.3 Ga tonalite subduction (garnet in source) Why Earth has continents- none on Mars, or Moon (or Venus?) Earth is 1) wet and 2) had subduction True granites only after 2.6 Ga – melting of pre-existing tonalite Fractionation events- produced granites with high Rb/Sr ratios HOW CONTINENTS GROW Problem: island arcs and ocean plateaux are basaltic, but average continental crust is andesite. Lower crust = basalt Upper crust = granodiorite Delamination of lower crust (back into mantle) after accretion. Some seismic evidence favors cold slabs in upper mantle Plate Tectonics with time 1) Collisional orogens: e.g. Alps, Himalayas (Phanerozoic); Wopmay Canada- early Proterozoic. 2) Accretionary orogens (terrane accretion): Archaean to Phanerozoic (Fig. 8.7) Continental age patterns (Fig. 8.11) Granatoid peaks: 2.7 – 2.5 Ga 2.0 – 1.7 Ga 1.3 – 1.0 Ga Greenstone peaks also at 2.7, 1.9, 1.3 Ga i.e. related to granitoids Peaks correspond to subduction/accretion events. Minima correspond to supercontinent existence- little subduction. Continental growth rates Net change in volume of continental crust Possibilities: positive, negative or zero. Four models of continental growth (fig. 8.10) 1) Rapid early, slow late growth 2) Continuous growth 3) Slow early, rapid late growth ? 4) Episodic growth Model 3: old-isotopic ages were re-set by metamorphism Model 1 implies re-cycling back into mantle- because early crust rare. Re-cycling 1) Subduction of sediment 2) Subduction erosion (Fig. 3.21b, Condie) 3) Delamination of lower crust into mantle Evidence for recycling Neodymium isotopes 147 Sm decays to 143 Nd, 144 Nd stable 143 Nd/144Nd increases with time. Fractionation behavior during partial melting: Nd prefers felsic magmas, Sm prefers mafic magmas 143 Nd/144Nd ratio will be LOWER in felsic (continental) rocks, HIGHER in mafic (mantle) rocks of same age. Epsilon parameter: Nd – compare to meteorites (CHUR) Nd = [(143/144 sample)/(143/144 CHUR)] x 104 Nd is positive for primitive mantle sources; negative for enriched continental sources