Now, a study from Caltech shows that the early Earth accreted from hot and dry materials, indicating that our planet's water-the crucial component for the evolution of life-must have arrived late in the history of Earth's formation.
The study, involving an international team of researchers, was conducted in the laboratories of Francois Tissot, assistant professor of geochemistry and Heritage Medical Research Institute Investigator; and Yigang Zhang of the University of Chinese Academy of Sciences. A paper describing the research appears in the journal Science Advances. Caltech graduate student Weiyi Liu is the paper's first author.
Though humans do not have a way to journey into the interior of our planet, the rocks deep within the earth can naturally make their way to the surface in the form of lavas. The parental magmas of these lavas can originate from different depths within Earth, such as the upper mantle, which begins around 15 kilometers under the surface and extends for about 680 kilometers; or the lower mantle, which spans from a depth of 680 kilometers all the way to the core-mantle boundary at about 2,900 kilometers below our feet.
Like sampling different layers of a cake-the frosting, the filling, the sponge-scientists can study magmas originating from different depths to understand the different "flavors" of Earth's layers: the chemicals found within and their ratios with respect to one another.
Because the formation of Earth was not instantaneous and instead involved materials accreting over time, samples from the lower mantle and upper mantle give different clues to what was happening over time during Earth's accretion. In the new study, the team found that the early Earth was primarily composed of dry, rocky materials: chemical signatures from deep within the planet showed a lack of so-called volatiles, which are easily evaporated materials like water and iodine.
In contrast, samples of the upper mantle revealed a higher proportion of volatiles, three times of those found in the lower mantle. Based on these chemical ratios, Liu created a model that showed Earth formed from hot, dry, rocky materials, and that a major addition of life-essential volatiles, including water, only occurred during the last 15 percent (or less) of Earth's formation.
The study is a crucial contribution to theories of planet formation, a field which has undergone several paradigm shifts in recent decades and is still characterized by vigorous scientific debate. In this context, the new study makes important predictions for the nature of the building blocks of other terrestrial planets-Mercury and Venus-which would be expected to have formed from similarly dry materials.
"Space exploration to the outer planets is really important because a water world is probably the best place to look for extraterrestrial life," Tissot says. "But the inner solar system shouldn't be forgotten. There hasn't been a mission that's touched Venus's surface for nearly 40 years, and there has never been a mission to the surface of Mercury. We need to be able to study those worlds to better understand how terrestrial planets such as Earth formed."
Research Report:I/Pu reveals Earth mainly accreted from volatile-poor differentiated planetesimals
Related Links
California Institute of Technology
Explore The Early Earth at TerraDaily.com
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