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Post Info TOPIC: Zircon Thermometer


L

Posts: 131433
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Jack Hills
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Western Australia’s roughly 80-kilometer-long Jack Hills formation is a collection of bits and pieces of greatly eroded sedimentary and metamorphic rocks such as chert, sandstone, and quartzite. Numerous dry streambeds run in a spider web of cracks among the reddish rocks and sparse vegetation of the landscape.

Position: Latitude -26.175844° longitude 116.979256°

Tiny crystals of a mineral called zircon have been found there in the Jack Hills, and these crystals are the oldest pieces of Earth material ever found. At about 4.4 billion years old, the crystals are even older than the rocks of the Jack Hills. The crystals, which formed only a few hundred million years after the birth of the Earth itself, are so durable that they have been recycled through countless generations of rock.

These crystals provide evidence that during the first 500 million years of Earth’s history—the Hadean Eon - the Earth was cooler and wetter than scientists used to think. A gentler Hadean could have permitted life to evolve far earlier in the planet’s history than scientists originally supposed

-- Edited by Blobrana at 15:45, 2006-03-02

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Posts: 131433
Date:
Zircon Thermometer
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Researchers at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute and Australian National University have found new evidence that environmental conditions on early Earth, within 200 million years of solar system formation, were characterized by liquid-water oceans and continental crust similar to those of the present day.
The researchers developed a new thermometer that made the discovery possible.

"Our data support recent theories that Earth began a pattern of crust formation, erosion, and sediment recycling as early in its evolution as 4.35 billion years ago, which contrasts with the hot, violent environment envisioned for our young planet by most researchers and opens up the possibility that life got a very early foothold." - E. Bruce Watson, Institute Professor of Science and professor of geochemistry at Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute.

According to Watson, the research provides important information and a new technique for making additional discoveries about the first eon of Earth's history, the Hadean eon, a time period for which still little is known.
The research findings are reported in the May 6 issue of the journal Science in a paper titled "Zircon Thermometer Reveals Minimum Melting Conditions on Earliest Earth."

Read more (pdf)

Watson collaborated with co-author T. Mark Harrison, director of the Research School of Earth Sciences at Australian National University and professor of geochemistry at UCLA, on the research.
The work was supported by the National Science Foundation (NSF), the Australian Research Council, and the NASA Astrobiology Institute.
Watson and Harrison developed a new thermometer that involves the measurement of the titanium content of zircon crystals to determine their crystallization temperature.
Zircons are tiny crystals embedded in rock that are the oldest known materials on Earth.
Zircons pre-date by 400 million years the oldest known rocks on Earth. These ancient crystals provide researchers with a window into the earliest history of the Earth and have been used to date the assembly and movement of continents and oceans.



"Zircons allow us to go further back in geologic time because they survive processes that rocks do not. Although they measure only a fraction of a millimetre in size, zircons hold a wealth of information about the very earliest history of Earth." - E. Bruce Watson.
In Watson and Harrison's work, zircons from the Jack Hills area of Western Australia ranging in age from 4.0 to 4.35 billion years were analyzed using the thermometer.
The new temperature data supports the existence of wet, minimum-melting conditions within 200 million years of solar system formation, according to the researchers.
In the Science paper, the researchers discuss how the thermometer provides clear distinction between zircons crystallized in the mantle, in granites, and during metamorphism, thereby providing consistent information about the conditions on Earth during the crystals' formation.
Watson describes his research as "materials science of the Earth," because it involves designing and executing laboratory experiments at the high temperatures and pressures found in the Earth's deep crust and upper mantle.


Zircon crystal believed to be the oldest known piece of Earth dated at 4.4 billion years old.
Discovered in Australia in 1984 by Simon Wilde, professor at Curtin University of Technology in Perth, Western Australia , this speck of zircon crystal is believed to be the oldest known piece of Earth. Analysis of the object in 2001 by John Valley, a UW-Madison professor of geology and geophysics concluded that the early Earth, instead of being a roiling ocean of magma, was cool enough to have oceans and continents -- key conditions for life.
Before its discovery, the oldest evidence for liquid water on the planet was from a rock estimated to be much younger -- 3.8 billion years old.


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