Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8906821 | Earth and Planetary Science Letters | 2018 | 8 Pages |
Abstract
The geodynamic regime of the early Earth remains elusive, with so far proposed hypotheses ranging from stagnant lid convection to rapid plate tectonics. Available geological data are severely limited for the first two billion years of the Earth's history, and this scarcity of relevant data is often compounded by the nonuniqueness of interpretation. Here we propose that the samarium-neodymium isotope evolution, which has been suggested to be consistent with stagnant lid convection in the early Earth, may be better understood as the result of rapid crustal growth and extensive crustal recycling. We delineate the permissible scenario of crustal evolution through geochemical box modeling with a Monte Carlo sampling of the model parameter space, and our results suggest that the net growth of continental crust was complete by the end of the Hadean and that the rate of crustal recycling could have been as high as 2â4Ã1022 kg Gyrâ1 at that time and has gradually decreased since then. Such crustal evolution yields a specific prediction for the present-day distribution of crustal formation ages, which is shown to be in remarkable agreement with a recent estimate based on the global compilation of zircon age data. The mode of subsolidus mantle convection after the putative magma ocean is probably plate tectonics, but its style could have been very different from that of contemporary plate tectonics, characterized by more voluminous magmatism and more destructive subduction.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Earth and Planetary Sciences
Earth and Planetary Sciences (General)
Authors
Juan Carlos Rosas, Jun Korenaga,